Book by Georgetown Professor Andrew Sobanet Spotlighted in Prestigious H-France Forum
January 6, 2020 鈥 professor Andrew Sobanet was featured in the most recent edition of , an online digital platform that promotes scholarly work and discussion on the history and culture of the Francophone world. Sobanet鈥檚 book, Generation Stalin: French Writers, the Fatherland, and the Cult of Personality, was one of only six selected for the Forum this year across all fields of French and Francophone studies.
About the Book

Generation Stalin: French Writers, the Fatherland, and the Cult of Personality,
In his book, Sobanet explores texts by Henri Barbusse, Romain Rolland, Paul Eluard, and Louis Aragon to demonstrate how these individuals constructed an imagined and glorified narrative of Stalin that shaped public and political perceptions of the Communist leader. His investigation has helped shed new light on French literature and history, underscoring trends that are relevant in today鈥檚 shifting political and cultural landscape. Because of the quality of his research, he was selected by one of the premier organizations for French studies in the world.
“Andrew Sobanet’s recent book, (Indiana UP, 2018), focusing on the previously unexamined Stalinist persuasions of four major 20th-century French writers and intellectuals, is a ground-breaking contribution to contemporary French Cultural Studies,鈥 says the chair of the Department of French and Francophone Studies, Deborah Lesko Baker. 鈥淭his volume features a broad range of historical, sociological, and narratological sources, and shines in the diversity of its research tools, in particular its innovative work with visual as well as narrative artifacts, and its unearthing of important materials from the recently-opened Soviet Communist Party archives–all of which demonstrate Professor Sobanet’s commitment to interdisciplinary, socially engaged work in the Humanities.”
Generation Stalin was also featured earlier this year in the podcast.
Publication in H-France
has 4,000 members globally and has become the largest scholarly organization for Francophone history and culture in the Anglophone world. This latest edition of the Forum begins with reviews of Generation Stalin by four professors from Dartmouth 海角论坛, the University of Illinois, the University of North Carolina, and Harvard University who are well-versed in French history, literature, culture, film, and art history.
鈥淕eneration Stalin offers a pathbreaking new perspective on an under-examined (or until now misexamined) convergence of twentieth-century French culture and politics,鈥 says Lynn Higgins, professor at Dartmouth 海角论坛. 鈥淪obanet understands his protagonists鈥 complexities and grasps the key personality traits that bring them to life for us, and his scholarly voice remains strong, engaging, and credible throughout.鈥
Collaborating Across Schools
Sobanet had the opportunity to respond to the reviews submitted by the four university professors, an experience that he holds in the highest regard.
鈥淚 was really happy to learn that my book had been selected for H-France’s Forum,鈥 says Sobanet. 鈥淚鈥檓 very grateful to the H-France editors and to the four distinguished reviewers who participated. It was very instructive to read four reviews of my book all at once, and I enjoyed engaging with the reviewers鈥 comments. It was an honor to have the opportunity to participate.鈥
