Jacques de Mahieu
Jacques de Mahieu, whose real name was Jacques Girault, (31 October 1915 – 4 October 1990) was a
He joined the
Biography
Early life and World War II
He was born in Marseille, France. As a young man he was influenced by authors such as Georges Sorel, Charles Maurras, and Alexis Carrel[2] and joined the Action Française.[3]
During World War II, he was a member of the 33rd Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS Charlemagne.[4][5]
After the
Academic career
De Mahieu studied at the Universities of
He became a professor of anthropological studies in Buenos Aires as the deputy rector[8] of the Institute of Human Studies (from 1953 to 1955 and again from 1972 to 1976). He also taught economy, ethnography and French at the National University of Cuyo[3] (1948–1955), and at the Universidad del Salvador (1964–1965).[2]
He also was a member of the
Later life and death
De Mahieu remained in Argentina in his later years.
Pre-Columbian contact theories
De Mahieu wrote on
His books were translated from French to German by Wilfred von Oven, formerly deputy to the Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels.[11]
Economics and politics
Mahieu wrote a book titled The Communal Economy (1964), which was inspired by a social and economic project developed in Mendoza, Argentina. The project ended during the Revolución Libertadora regime, which toppled Juan Perón's government in 1955.[12]
Bibliography
In English
- Foundations of Biopolitics: Race. Ethno-genopolitics. Population Volume. Migrations, Cariou Publishing, 2023
In Spanish
- Europa y el nacionalsocialismo: desde el tratado de Versalles, video
- La inteligencia organizadora, Editorial San Luis, 1950
- Filosofía de la estética, Universidad Nacional de Cuyo, 1950
- Evolución y porvenir del sindicalismo, Arayú, 1954
- La economía comunitaria, Universidad Argentina de Ciencias Sociales, 1964
- Diccionario de ciencia política, Books International, 1966
- Proletariado y cultura, Marú, 1967
- Fundamentos de biopolítica, Centro Editor Argentino, 1968
- Maurras y Sorel, Centro Editor Argentino, 1969
- Tratado de sociología general, Centro Editor Argentino, 1969
- El estado comunitario, La Bastilla (2nd edition), 1973
- El gran viaje del Dios-sol, Hachette, 1976
- La agonía del dios Sol, Hachette, 1977
- La geografía secreta de América, Hachette, 1978
- El rey vikingo del Paraguay, Hachette, 1979
- La naturaleza del cosmos, Retorno, 2008
In French
- Précis de biopolitique, Éditions celtiques, 1969
- Le Grand voyage du dieu-soleil, Édition spéciale, 1971
- L'Agonie du Dieu Soleil. Les Vikings en Amérique du Sud, Robert Laffont, 1974
- Drakkars sur l'Amazone, Copernic, 1977
- L'Imposture de Christophe Colomb. La Géographie Secrète de l'Amérique, Copernic, 1979
- La Fabuleuse Épopée des Troyens en Amérique du Sud, Pardès, 1998
- Les Templiers en Amérique, J'ai lu, 1999
References
- La Nación, 16 February 1997 (in Spanish)
- ^ a b c d Nouvelle École n°47, 1995
- ^ L'Express, 12 August 1988
- L'Express, 9 March 1998 (in French)
- ^ Hudson, Christopher (March 10, 2002). "The truth about ODESSA". The (Brisbane) Sunday Mail.
- ^ Instituto de Investigación y Estudios Exobiológicos Delegación Chilena Archived 2007-03-12 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
- ^ Mark Falcoff, Peron's Nazi Ties, Time, November 9, 1998 (in English)
- ^ Serge Dumont, Les Brigades noires: l'extrême-droite en France et en Belgique francophone, de 1944 à nos jours, EPO, 1983, pp.35-36
- Pagina/12, 15 December 2002 (interview with Uki Goñi(in Spanish)
- ^ Sete Cidades Archived 2018-07-19 at the Wayback Machine, Universidad Federal de Piauí (in Portuguese)
- S2CID 250653823.
- ^ For a description of his influence in those revolutionary groups who took to guns in the last 60's and early 70's in Argentina, see Roberto Bardini, Tacuara, la Pólvora y la Sangre ("Tacuara, Gunpowder and Blood"), dedicated mainly to the far-right Tacuara Nationalist Movement.