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                                       Details for article 8 of 8 found articles
 
 
  Restoring the ruins: the social context of reconstruction in the countrysides of Northern France in the aftermath of the great war
 
 
Title: Restoring the ruins: the social context of reconstruction in the countrysides of Northern France in the aftermath of the great war
Author: Clout, Hugh
Appeared in: Landscape research
Paging: Volume 21 (1996) nr. 3 pages 213-230
Year: 1996-11
Contents: The reconstruction of devastated farms, villages and market towns in northern France was not masterminded by the state or carried out by its emergency agencies, which were concerned with filling trenches, removing shells, restoring farmland and patching up ruins. Segments of French society needed to mobilize themselves to declare their losses and claim compensation from the state. Proposals by French trades unionists to bring in German building workers to reconstruct rural settlements were rejected. Instead, general purpose reconstruction co-operatives were established, first in Lorraine and then throughout the regions devastees. It is argued that the differing attitudes to religion and trades unionism in the countryside of northern France were reflected in the varying efforts made to effect rural reconstruction during the 1920s. The dream of international labour solidarity through reconstruction was not realized. Rather, restoration of northern France was undertaken by private construction companies, often contracted to general-purpose co-operatives.
Publisher: Routledge
Source file: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

                             Details for article 8 of 8 found articles
 
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