As historian and WWII resistance fighter Marc Bloch is inducted into the Pantheon, Sharon Gaffney is pleased to welcome Dr. Andrew Smith, Historian of Modern France and Lecturer in Liberal Arts at Queen Mary University of London. Marc Bloch's entry into the Panthéon is described by Andrew Smith not simply as the commemoration of a distinguished historian, but as a profound statement about the contemporary crisis of democracy, truth, and citizenship. Smith argues that Bloch's enduring significance lies in the fusion of scholarship and civic responsibility: he was a historian who viewed the past as a tool for understanding the present, a citizen who defended republican values in times of national collapse, and a resistance fighter who ultimately sacrificed his life for those principles. In Smith's analysis, Bloch's pantheonisation arrives at a moment when France and other democracies confront challenges strikingly reminiscent of those Bloch diagnosed in the twentieth century: distrust of news and information, political polarisation, attacks on minorities, democratic fragility, and the erosion of truth. The ceremony therefore functions simultaneously as a tribute to a beloved intellectual and as a warning from history itself. Bloch emerges not merely as a figure of memory, but as a guide for navigating the democratic uncertainties of the present.
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