Barres’ antisemitism did not begin with the Dreyfus Affair. As a young
journalist and novelist, Barres socialized with Drumont, the author of
La France juive, and one of Drumont’s intellectual mentors, the
racialist Soury. Supported by General Boulanger, Barrès was elected as a
“revisionist” candidate in Nancy in 1889 after a violent campaign in
Le Courrier de l’Est,
where he exploited xenophobia and antisemitism and denounced
republicans affiliated with the government : opportunism was “the party
of the Jews,” Rothschild was “an infamous name.” A self-proclaimed
socialist, Barrès cultivated nationalist passions in
La Cocarde
(1894-1895) and wanted “France for the French :” it was there that he
wrote, among other articles, “The Parade of Judas” after the degradation
of Captain Dreyfus. On the eve of the publication of
Les Déracinés
(1897), his so-called “national-socialism” (not to be confused with the
later brand of “National Socialism” associated with the Nazi Party) had
fell out of favor. Soon after that, Barrès’ militant antidreyfusism
dispelled any residual confusion concerning his actual ideological and
political orientation
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