The World of the Paris Café: Sociability among the French Working Class, 1789-1914 (The Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science)
Book Details
Description
The World of the Paris Café traces the perceptions of the café; delineates its laws and regulations; explores café etiquette, the role of the café owner, gender relations within the café, and the pivotal contribution of café sociability to the definition of familial, professional, and political relations. Haine, a faculty member at Holy Names College in California, firmly rejects the "misérabiliste" label so often attached to 19th-century Parisian workers, advocating instead for the great creativity they mustered to cope with poverty and proletarianization. He ably shows how, by bringing together the voices of thousands of customers through common rituals, reading matter, and conversations, the café fostered a true climate of opinion and made possible the growth of a proletarian public sphere. His articulately written account, based largely on Parisian judicial and civil records and newspaper accounts of café activity, balances academic rigor with an edge of humor, exploring what he terms both the "horrible and the humorous" elements of café culture. --Bertina Loeffler


