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Henri Lefebvreโ€™s 1939 book on Nietzsche and the โ€˜Liste Ottoโ€™ โ€“ which books of his were banned?

About twenty years ago, in an essay on Henri Lefebvre, I said that his book on Nietzsche (1939) was on the prohibited โ€˜Liste Ottoโ€™. These were books that had to be removed from sale, and existing copies destroyed, after the German occupation of France. For other reasons now Iโ€™ve recently looking at the list โ€“ the 1940 version is here โ€“ and discover that this is not one of the books on the list. Mea culpa.

As far as I can tell, only two books written by Lefebvre are on the list โ€“ there are various iterations from 1940 and through the occupation. The books are Hitler au pouvoir (1938) and Le Matรฉrialisme dialectique (1940). So too was Caยญhiers de Lรฉยญnine sur la diaยญlecยญtique de Heยญgel (1938) and Karl Marxโ€™s Morceaux choisis (1934), both of which Lefebvre and Norbert Guterman had edited.

Three books that were on the list - Le matรฉrialisme dialectique is a later reprint
Three books that were on the list โ€“ Le matรฉrialisme dialectique shown here is a later reprint

Guterman was Jewish, so this alone would have been enough for inclusion on this list. But Lefebvreโ€™s book on Nietzsche, his Le Nationalisme contre les Nations (1937) and the collection of texts by Hegel he and Guterman had edited (1938) are not on the lists Iโ€™ve seen, and nor is their co-authored book La conscience mystifiรฉe (1936).

three books that were not included on the list
three books that were not included on the list

There is therefore something of an arbitrary nature of the list โ€“ there are obviously reasons why the Nazi occupiers would object to those they did include, but those reasons would also seem to apply to ones they did not. The Nietzsche book, for example, is very much written as a challenge to the fascist appropriation.

In looking further into this, though, I went back to the original edition of Critique de la vie quotidienne from 1946. On the page โ€˜Du mรชme auteurโ€™, Lefebvre lists his previous publications.

There he distinguishes three ways his books were suppressed.

  1. seized and destroyed by the [ร‰douard] Daladier government in October 1939
  2. seized and destroyed by the publisher at the beginning of 1940
  3. seized and destroyed by the occupying authority, on the โ€˜Liste Ottoโ€™ at the end of 1940.

Interestingly, he says Le Nationalisme was in the first category; Hitler and Nietzsche in the second; Le matรฉrialisme dialectique and the collections on Lenin and Hegel were in the third. From the lists Iโ€™ve seen, this isnโ€™t entirely correct either for category three, but it explains why the Nietzsche book was indeed removed from sale shortly after publication, and why copies are so hard to find today. And presumably the โ€˜Liste Ottoโ€™ did not need to proscribe books that were already banned.

The list of books by Lefebvre โ€˜En prรฉparationโ€™ is also interesting โ€“ only a few of these were ever published, but thatโ€™s another story, some of which also concerns censorship.

I hope what Iโ€™ve reported here is accurate, but happy to receive additions or corrections.

Incidentally, my 2004 book on Lefebvre has long been available as print-on-demand only, and keeps going up in price. Someone has uploaded a version here thoughโ€ฆ

stuartelden

Three books that were on the list - Le matรฉrialisme dialectique is a later reprint

three books that were not included on the list

From research to the mainstream โ€“ Judging the British Academy Book Prize for Global Cultural Understanding

By: Taster
As nominations for this yearโ€™s prize open, Madawi Al-Rasheed reflects on the experience of judging the British Academy Book Prize for Global Cultural Understanding and considers how research based non-fiction writing can reach beyond local and disciplinary concerns to engage global audiences. Serving as jury member of the British Academy Book Prize for Global Cultural โ€ฆ Continued
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