
The Margins of Urban Life brings to life the "floating worlds of the periphery" in nineteenth-century French cities--the world of beggars, the most miserable prostitutes, ragpickers, casual labor, and unwanted people; the location of slaughterhouses, gas factories, tanneries, and, increasingly, even executions. The men and women of the suburbs and faubourgs were long identified by urban elites and government officials with the turbulent "dangerous classes" who might one day fall upon the wealthy quarters of the center. Merriman analyzes and evokes the social, class, neighborhood, cultural, and political solidarities--the shared sense of not belonging--that made the marginal people in peripheral places emerge as contenders for political power. His investigation explores the world of the Catalan agricultural laborers, the textile workers of the "high town" of Reims, the bitter rivalry between Catholic and Protestant workers in the faubourge of Nimes, the haven for under- and unemployed proletarians in Ingouville, above Le Havre, and France's strange frontier town, Napoléon-Vendée.
This work investigates how the marginalized populations of nineteenth-century French urban peripheries transformed their shared exclusion into a distinct political identity. John M. Merriman, a noted historian of modern France, utilizes archival records and social analysis to examine the lives of those residing in the faubourgs and suburbs between 1815 and 1851. He argues that the physical and social separation of these groups from the urban center fostered a unique solidarity that eventually positioned them as significant actors in the political landscape of the era.
What You Will Find
Historians frequently cite this text as a foundational study for understanding the intersection of urban geography and class formation in post-revolutionary France. Scholars note the depth of the archival research and the clarity with which Merriman connects local social dynamics to broader national political trends.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
1991-04-18
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195064380
ISBN-13:
9780195064384
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