(How) Could One Be French in Banat (1770-1920)? Cristian Cercel Cover Image

(How) Could One Be French in Banat (1770-1920)? Cristian Cercel
(How) Could One Be French in Banat (1770-1920)? Cristian Cercel

Author(s): Christian Cercel
Subject(s): Cultural history, Ethnohistory, Social history, 19th Century, Pre-WW I & WW I (1900 -1919)
Published by: Verlag Herder-Institut
Keywords: Banat; Franco-German Entanglements; French in Banat; Alsace-Lorraine;

Summary/Abstract: This article engages with discourses about a Lorrainian/Alsatian-Lorrainian/French presence in Banat throughout the nineteenth century and up until the end of World War I. It contextualizes these discourses within the broader context of Franco-German entanglements and shows that such entanglements had reverberations in the east of Europe. It links them with larger processes of identity construction with respect to the Banat Swabians—eighteenth-century settlers in Banat and their descendants. The analysis shows that the Banat instantiation of the distinction between a voluntaristic French identity and a descent-based German identity was extremely porous. Frenchness in Banat was essentially understood as being based on descent, while Germanness appeared not only as descent-based, but also as an identity one could assimilate into. In the early aftermath of World War I, ideas about descent as an identity-endowing element were drawn on in attempts to cast France in the role of a kin-state for Banat Swabians.

  • Issue Year: 74/2025
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 31-62
  • Page Count: 32
  • Language: English
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