This imaginative study recaptures 100 years in the life of Limoges, France's first socialist city, at a time when Limoges rode high on the crest of every wave of social, political, and industrial change. The story of this single city is the story of urban transformation and political radicalism in 19th-century France, of the struggle between tradition and modernity in French society and politics that took place not only within cities but also between cities and the countryside. Here, Merriman offers vivid portraits of particular social groups, neighborhoods, and events in 19th-century Limoges to describe and analyze the impact of large-scale industrialization, the social bases of political conflict, and the eventual emergence of a powerful working class. The central characters of Merriman's study are the very ordinary denizens of this extraordinary city--its butchers, porcelain workers, laundresses, priests--through whom one sees the effects of urbanization and
industrialization on their quarters, work, religion, culture, and political life. The close of the 19th century marked the end of one of France's last truly revolutionary situations, concludes Merriman, as growing centralization dampened revolutionary zeal and the 20th century ushered in a combination of industrial capitalism and a powerful state that was seemingly invulnerable to revolutionary challenges from the working class.
Industry Reviews
"[Merriman] takes the reader on vivid tours of a rapidly changing regional capital...A city could not hope to have a better biographer."--Contemporary French Civilization
"[Merriman] has an impressive mastery of the archival sources and a fine eye for the significant detail and illuminating anecdote."--American Historical Review
"[An] impressive work of local history."--Journal of Social History
"In the field of labor formation and class consciousness it is required reading."--Journal of Modern History
"Solves about as well as one can imagine the old problem of reconciling analytic description and forward movement in written history....This is a major work, exemplary of its kind."--Journal of European Economic History