ABSTRACT

If any modern democratic leader has believed in the "great man'' theory of history and acted self-consciously in accordance with it, it was surely de Gaulle. On both occasions when he came to power it was in his own right, as a ``providential figure'', not as the representative of a political or social movement. In office, his wielding of power was, by modern standards, remarkably personal; and his impact on France, and on Europe, was immense. He is a natural subject for Profiles in Power.

chapter |15 pages

1940: The Assumption

chapter |24 pages

1940–44: Symbol

chapter |16 pages

1944–46: Liberator

chapter |18 pages

1958: The Return

chapter |26 pages

1963–67: Sovereign

chapter |17 pages

1968–69: The Reckoning

chapter |8 pages

Conclusion