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Dividing Paris : urban renewal and social inequality, 1852-1870

Title
Dividing Paris : urban renewal and social inequality, 1852-1870 / Esther da Costa Meyer.
ISBN
9780691162805
0691162808
9780691223537
Publication
Princeton : Princeton University Press, [2022]
Copyright Notice Date
©2022
Physical Description
x, 400 pages : illustrations (some color), maps (some color), plans (some color), portraits (some color) ; 26 cm
Biographical / Historical Note
Professor da Costa Meyer teaches modern architecture and contemporary architecture. A native of Brazil, she specializes in issues of cultural translation involving architecture focusing on buildings erected by colonial powers in the Global South.
Summary
"Dividing Paris: Urban Renewal and Social Inequality, 1852-1870 offers a new look at the ambitious urban changes that transformed the city of Paris during the Second Empire, when Paris became a template for urban renewal in many large cities in Europe, North, and South America. Esther da Costa Meyer looks at the social and historical of context of these urban changes--what Napoleon III, his prefect Georges-Eugene Haussman, and their team of engineers planned, as well as how the diverse and deeply stratified public responded to them. Along with broad streets and boulevards intended to enable crowds and merchandise to circulate and, also, impede the chances of popular insurgency, Haussman's project of urban renewal called for ample water supply, sewerage, and public parks and gardens. These changes radically altered the old, tightly-knit weave of the medieval city, serving the needs of the industrial bourgeoisie while forcing the urban poor to the outskirts. Dividing Paris is the first architectural history of the city that takes into account the larger part of the urban territory annexed in 1860, a ring of settlements and villages which became increasingly class-specific. Instead of relating the story of Haussmanization as a top-down administrative effort, as Haussman's critics and admirers have both tended to do, it draws on primary sources, especially newspapers and memoirs, to investigate the degree to which Parisians' experiences of modernity were class and gender-specific and to ask what strategies working class men and women in particular used to cope with and in some cases resist the changing world around them. At the same time, da Costa Meyer resists the familiar narrative of Paris as "capital of the 19th century" that has endured, at least since Walter Benjamin's famous essay, as euro-centric and misleading insofar as it fails to situate Paris's urban developments in a broader global context or to acknowledge the extent to which Haussmanization was itself implicated in the broader imperial project on which France was embarked at the time"-- Provided by publisher.
Other formats
ebook version :
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
January 30, 2023
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Introduction
The President, the Emperor, and the Prefect
Requiem
Streets and boulevards
Water
De Profundis
Disenchanted nature
The Periphery
Conclusion.
Genre/Form
History.
Citation

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