A state of decadence Maurrassisme had as its ambition to be a counter-revolutionary doctrine, affirming the cohesion of
France and its greatness. It began from a slogan "Politics first", from a postulate,
patriotism, which the
French Revolution had erased in preference to
nationalism, and a state: for Maurras, the French society of the late 19th century was undermined by decadence and corruption. According to him, these ills arose from the Revolution and caused their paroxysm in the
Dreyfus affair. Maurras'
philosophical influences ranged from
Plato and
Aristotle to
Joseph de Maistre, passing through
Dante,
Thomas Aquinas and
Auguste Comte. His historical influences ranged from
Sainte-Beuve to
Fustel de Coulanges passing through
Hippolyte Taine and
Ernest Renan. At fault, for Maurras, was the revolutionary and romanic spirit, borne by the liberal forces which he called the four confederated states (
États confédérés), defined by him in 1949 in
Pour un jeune Français: the
Jews, the
Protestants, the
freemasons and foreigners whom Maurras called "
metics" (
métèques). These represented the "anti-France"; they could not in any way be admitted as part of the French nation.
Maurras' solution: order, reason, classicism and liberties Maurrassisme seems to have been born from a desire for order in the young Charles Maurras, attributed by some to his deafness. • In philosophy, this desire for order incurred an unconditional attachment to
reason. • In art, the defense of
classicism against the "deviant" directions of
romanticism. • In politics, he implied aiming for a regime based on authority. But for Maurras, a regionalist
Provençal poet, authority had to accord with the respect for regional liberties – a stipulation which, according to him, could only be found in
monarchy. Maurras thus became a
royalist on principle in 1896. More precisely with regard to politics,
Maurrasisme rested on the following policies to ensure national cohesion: • The exclusion from the nation of the four "confederated states", and the exaltation of the national interest ("only France"), • Putting in place institutions charged with simultaneously guaranteeing the regional freedoms of the "real Nation" and maintaining national unity (for Maurras this institution was the Monarchy). • In morality, the magisterium of the
Catholic Church as a unifying cement, and a creator and model of order.
A political model based on the "Real Country" (pays réel) In the line of positivism, Maurras considered that societal organisation and institution ought to be the fruit of the selection imposed by the centuries, "organising empiricism" being considered more effective than idealized theories, because of its being adapted to each national situation. Monarchy played a part in these institutions, which were necessary notably to restrain Frankish-French rivalries. The confidence in institutions forged by time led Maurras to distinguish the "Real Country" (
pays réel), rooted in the realities of life — locality, work, trades, the parish and the family — from the "Legal Country" (
pays légal) which he cast as artificially imposed on the "Real". These thoughts revisited
organicist themes of Catholic political tradition. Maurras' institutional instinct also owed much to his initial
federalism and his affiliation to the
Félibrige movement of
Mistral. He saw in monarchy the key to the vault of
decentralisation. He considered that the people's direct attachment to the sovereign's authority and the moral cement of the Catholic Church were unifying forces which would be enough to ensure national unity in a largely decentralized political system. The republic, by contrast, could only achieve these aims by being constrained by the iron belt of Napoleonic centralized administration. His vision was authority on high, with freedom beneath. It may be noted that it was through pragmatism and obsession with civil war that, in 1914 as in 1940, Maurras remained faithful to his principle of nationalist compromise, or the
union nationale in time of crisis, and supported both
Georges Clemenceau and
Philippe Pétain in this. == Place in the history of political ideas ==