The articles in The Tocqueville Review's new special issue edited by Pauline Peretz begin to explore race in the French and American military during the World War II in a comparative manner.
CONTENTS
État, armée et race pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale Comparaison France-États-Unis
Pauline PERETZ – État, armée et race pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale. Comparaison France-États-Unis. Introduction 7
Christine KNAUER – Fearlessly Fighting for the Oppressor. French Colonial Troops in the African American Press during World War II 19
Pauline PERETZ – “No Experiment… at This Critical Time”? Racial Integration at Fort Huachuca’s All-Black Hospital During World War II 39
Claire MIOT – Femmes de l’ennemi ou du colonisateur ? Les relations entreles soldats colonisés de l’Empire et les Allemandes dans le regard de la hiérarchie militaire française (1944-1945) 59
Ruth GINOT – Blood for Equality. African Soldiers’ Struggles for Rights after World War II 81
Varia
Robert LEROUX – Raymond Boudon, lecteur de Weber 105
Éloi LAURENT – Des murs ou des digues ? 119
Tocquevilliana
Ella STREET – Tocqueville’s Savages 131
Matthew H. HARTMAN – Tocqueville’s Centralization Well-Understood 163
Cheryl B. WELCH – Tocqueville’s New Political Science in the Shadow of the Old 185
Francesco GALLINO – Obedience and Reform. Tocqueville’s Writings on Prison as Theoretical Works 213
Reviews
Françoise MÉLONIO – De la pratique de la comparaison francoaméricaine 237
William J. NOVAK, Stephen W. SAWYER, and James T. SPARROW Social Freedom, Democracy and the Political: Three Reflections on Axel Honneth’s Idea of Socialism 241
Contributors 260