Between 1936 and 1938, the French alliance system in East Central Europe collapsed. The resulting dramatic expansion of German power led directly to the Second World War. This illuminating study investigates the implications of French military, economic and diplomatic policies in Central Europe from Versailles until the fall of France, establishing the proper context for the policy options of Léon Blum's Popular Front. It focuses on the clash between the French military and French radical politics in 1936–7 when Blum's government sought to rally to the defence of Czechoslovakia. The figure of Blum illustrates the insights and the dilemmas of a democratic Socialist caught up in the imbrication of foreign and domestic politics which increasingly characterised the 1930s.
A historian of Europe whose work crosses many boundaries, Nicole Jordan's present research concerns the often perverse cultural encounters and societal dialogues about cultural dominance which underpinned European war origins throughout the twentieth century, and the evolution in these conflicts of mechanized death against civilians as well as combatants. She recently also developed an interest in medical history, specifically in the intersection of war, epidemics, and imperialism in the context of the Balkan Wars and the First World War.