Andrea Azzarelli, «Une distraction patriotique». Shooting Clubs and State Institutions in Third Republic France (1871-1914), Contemporanea. Rivista di storia dell’800 e del ‘900, (4) 2025: 535-561

From the Second Empire, across the Franco-Prussian War, and into the eve of the Great War, France experienced a remarkable proliferation of shooting societies. This article examines how these associations – both recreational and patriotic – served as intermediaries between local civic initiatives and the expanding reach of the republican state. Drawing on archival and quantitative sources, it traces their evolution, regional distribution, and entanglement with military institutions. Concentrated above all in the departments invaded in 1870, these societies acquired a distinctly military character and developed close ties with the army. They offered new forms of civic engagement, enabling citizens – especially those aligned with republican ideals – to shape, from below, aspects of military training and culture. By selectively supporting and regulating these associations, the Third Republic sought both to republicanise the army and to channel popular militarism within state authority. The history of the rifle clubs thus reveals a negotiated process of state-building, in which entertainment, patriotism, and the politics of arms converged to redefine the meaning of republican citizenship.

https://www.rivisteweb.it/doi/10.1409/119138