Paris, capital of modernity
by
 
Harvey, David, 1935-

Title
Paris, capital of modernity

Author
Harvey, David, 1935-

ISBN
9780415944212
 
9780415952200

Personal Author
Harvey, David, 1935-

Publication Information
New York ; London : Routledge, 2003.

Physical Description
xi, 372 p. : ill., maps ; 25 cm.

Contents
Introduction: Modernity as Break -- Pt. 1. Representations: Paris 1830-1848 -- 1. The Myths of Modernity: Balzac's Paris -- 2. Dreaming the Body Politic: Revolutionary Politics and Utopian Schemes, 1830-1848 -- Pt. 2. Materializations: Paris 1848-1870 -- 3. Prologue -- 4. The Organization of Space Relations -- 5. Money, Credit, and Finance -- 6. Rent and the Propertied Interest -- 7. The State -- 8. Astract and Concrete Labor -- 9. The Buying and Selling of Labor Power -- 10. The Condition of Women -- 11. The Reproduction of Labor Power -- 12. Consumerism, Spectacle, and Leisure -- 13. Community and Class -- 14. Natural Relations -- 15. Science and Sentiment, Modernity and Tradition -- 16. Rhetoric and Representation -- 17. The Geopolitics of Urban Transformation -- Pt. 3. Coda -- 18. The Building of the Basilica of Sacre-Coeur.

Abstract
"Paris has long been one of the most influential cities in the world, but it was during the days of the "Second Empire" that the city became the template for modernity as we have come to know it. In the period between the failed revolutions of 1848 and 1871, Paris underwent a stunning transformation. Baron Hausmann, the city's legendary prefect, orchestrated the physical makeover of Paris, replacing the city's medieval plan with the grand boulevards that dominate the city to this day. Just as important, the era saw both the rise of a new form of capitalism dominated by high finance and the emergence of modern consumer culture. The sweeping social and physical changes elicited the novel cultural response of "modernism," but also further divided the city along class lines. The result was the rise and bloody suppression of the Paris Commune in 1871, which is recounted here in vivid detail.
 
Making sure to place social and economic forces at the heart of the story, Paris, Capital of Modernity provides a dramatic and panoramic account of this pivotal era, and will stand alongside Carl Schorske's Fin-de-Siecle Vienna as a definitive history of the emergence of the modern city."--BOOK JACKET.

Geographic Term
Paris (France) -- Civilization -- 19th century.
 
France -- History -- Second Empire, 1852-1870.


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