“…That said, l’affaire Galmot did not excite the same mobilisation against a blatant injustice, in which racialised discourses played their part, as other cases did. The Scottsboro case, which began in March 1931, with the campaign of support for its defendants organised by the international communist movement, is an obvious comparison here, with the French left expertly mobilised and vocal at a Scottsboro meeting held at the Salle Wagram in Paris in June 1932 (Miller, Pennybacker and Rosenhaft, 2001: 403). Moreover, the trial is largely overlooked in recent scholarship, either reduced to Monnerville’s plaidoirie (Wilder, 2005: 170) or subsumed under the story of Monnerville and misdated (Marshall, 2009: 238).…”