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Institut d'Action française

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Institut d'Action française
FormationFebruary 1906
Headquarters33 Rue Saint-André des Arts, 6th arrondissement of Paris

The Institut d'Action française was a French political training institute founded by the Action Française movement. It was established in February 1906 in Paris at the initiative of Léon de Montesquiou and implemented by Louis Dimier. The institute aimed to study in detail major political, social, and religious issues.

History

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At the dawn of the 20th century, the Action Française concluded that the Republican education system, from primary schools to universities, particularly in the teaching of history, had become a project of dismantling the French nation. This observation led to the creation of the Institut d'Action française in 1906. Historian Jacques Prévotat described the institute as a "kind of university created to oppose the Enlightenment and official universities."[1] It was considered in Action Française Almanacs as an "institution of counter-revolutionary higher education."[2] According to Louis Dimier, "the education proposed presupposes a fundamental hostility—an instructive and fertile hostility—between intelligence and the Revolution."[3] The institute was envisioned as a training school for leaders.

The institute served two purposes: to counter the symbols of the Third Republic's academic institutions, such as the École libre des sciences politiques on Rue Saint-Guillaume and the Sorbonne, and to attract young individuals united by Lucien Moreau under the Action Française Students Federation.[4]

After being interrupted during the First World War, the courses resumed regularly in 1919.

Organization

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The institute was initially financed by Louise de Courville, a friend of Charles Maurras and the Barrès family.[5]

Originally, the institute had seven chairs, with additional ones added later:[6]

Courses

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Courses were free and open to students from Parisian and provincial universities as well as private institutions. They were held at 33 Rue Saint-André des Arts and administered from the headquarters of the newspaper L'Action française at 14 Rue de Rome.

The courses critiqued and denounced democratic ideas by studying the doctrines of the Republic and the major figures of democracy. They also covered laws, customs, and French history.

Louis Dimier presented counter-revolution as "a work of intelligence directed at dismantling what, for a hundred years in France, has been called the French Revolution." He organized the curriculum around six themes and thirteen authors, including:

Publications

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The bulletins of the Courses of the Institut d'Action française were initially published by the Jean Rivain bookshop and later by the Nouvelle Librairie nationale.[7]

Members

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Notable lecturers at the institute included:

References

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  1. ^ Jacques Prévotat. L'Action française. Que sais-je?. Presses universitaires de France. pp. 20–29.
  2. ^ Olivier Dard (2019). Charles Maurras - Le maître et l'action: Le nationaliste intégral. Dunod.
  3. ^ Olivier Dard. Charles Maurras - Le maître et l'action: Le nationaliste intégral.
  4. ^ Olivier Dard. Charles Maurras - Le maître et l'action: Le nationaliste intégral.
  5. ^ Bruno Dumons (2019). "L'Action française au féminin: Réseaux et figures de militantes au début du XXe siècle". L'Action française: culture, société, politique. Presses universitaires du Septentrion.
  6. ^ Gilles Richard (2017). Histoire des droites en France de 1815 à nos jours. Perrin.
  7. ^ Bruno Dumons. L'Action française au féminin.
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