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Review: Why The Dreyfus Affair Matters

Dreyfus is still with us

January 21, 2010 14:03
1890 caricature of Emile Zola citing his J’Accuse article defending Dreyfus

ByNatasha Lehrer, Natasha Lehrer

2 min read

By Louis Begley
Yale University Press, £18

Why the Dreyfus Affair Matters combines the acuity of a legal mind — its author Louis Begley was a lawyer for 45 years — with the sensibility of a novelist (he wrote, among other novels, About Schmidt and Matters of Honour). The result is a brilliant work of historical storytelling, reminding us to what extent the drama is in the detail.

The broad brush-strokes of L’Affaire Dreyfus are known to every French schoolchild: the conviction for treason of an Jewish officer in the French army, condemned to a life sentence of solitary confinement on the infamous Devil’s Island, off the coast of French Guyana, for a crime he did not commit.

Begley takes us deep into the byzantine maze of the Affair, reminding his readers that it is no less true today that it is through the faithful execution of the law that we safeguard our liberties and the honour of our institutions.