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Paris, Capital of Modernity
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Table of Contents

Introduction; Part 1 Representations; Chapter 1 The Myths of Modernity; Chapter 2 Dreaming the Body Politic; Part 2 Materializations; Chapter 3 Prologue; Chapter 4 The Organization of Space Relations; Chapter 5 Money, Credit, and Finance; Chapter 6 Rent and the Propertied Interest; Chapter 7 The State; Chapter 8 Abstract and Concrete Labor; Chapter 9 The Buying and Selling of Labor Power; Chapter 10 The Condition of Women; Chapter 11 The Reproduction of Labor Power; Chapter 12 Consumerism, Spectacle, and Leisure; Chapter 13 Community and Class; Chapter 14 Natural Relations; Chapter 15 Science and Sentiment, Modernity and Tradition; Chapter 16 Rhetoric and Representation; Chapter 17 The Geopolitics of Urban Transformation; Part 3 Coda; Chapter 18 The Building of the Basilica of Sacré-Coeur;

About the Author

David Harvey is one of the world's leading critical intellectuals. He is the author of 10 books, many of which are classics. He now teaches at the CUNY Graduate Center and the London School of Economics, after many years teaching at Johns Hopkins and Oxford.

Reviews

"David Harvey is perhaps the most important urban scholar writing in the English language, and here he is at his best. He has given us a multifaceted but synthetic history of the emergence of urban modernity in its putative birthplace. It is a tour de force, brilliantly attentive to connections, relations, and distinctions, while it is remarkably inclusive in its coverage, from infrastructure and finance to poetry and the political imagination. Not only is it an immensely readable history, but it brilliantly brings together the structural and moral narratives of Second Empire Paris." -- Thomas Bender, University Professor of the Humanities and Professor of History and author of The UnfinishedCity: New York and the Metropolitan Idea
"Returning to a topic that has long fascinated him, David Harvey gives us a vivid social, literary, economic and pictorial geography of the making of Paris during its nineteenth century transition to capitalist modernity. Carefully argued, fluidly written, pointedly political, and lavishly illustrated with period cartoons, caricatures and photos, this book is spectacular both in its analysis and in the "structure of feeling" it creates for the moment of Parisian modernity. His most original work in more than a decade, Harvey does for Paris what Schorske did for fin de siècle Vienna." -- Neil Smith, author of American Empire
"Mr. Harvey handles numerous primary and secondary sources and uses theoretical models effectively to examine the motivations for and and consequences of Baron Haussman's re-creation of Paris. The book is neatly illustrated by art and literature from the period..." -- The New YorkSun
"David Harvey is a noted geographer. Harvey defines modernity as "creative destruction". He is good on destruction and even better on the creative ways it was depicted and resisted. ...it is a handsome volume, and its many illustrations will appeal to many readers
." -- Journal of Regional Science

"David Harvey is perhaps the most important urban scholar writing in the English language, and here he is at his best. He has given us a multifaceted but synthetic history of the emergence of urban modernity in its putative birthplace. It is a tour de force, brilliantly attentive to connections, relations, and distinctions, while it is remarkably inclusive in its coverage, from infrastructure and finance to poetry and the political imagination. Not only is it an immensely readable history, but it brilliantly brings together the structural and moral narratives of Second Empire Paris." -- Thomas Bender, University Professor of the Humanities and Professor of History and author of The UnfinishedCity: New York and the Metropolitan Idea
"Returning to a topic that has long fascinated him, David Harvey gives us a vivid social, literary, economic and pictorial geography of the making of Paris during its nineteenth century transition to capitalist modernity. Carefully argued, fluidly written, pointedly political, and lavishly illustrated with period cartoons, caricatures and photos, this book is spectacular both in its analysis and in the "structure of feeling" it creates for the moment of Parisian modernity. His most original work in more than a decade, Harvey does for Paris what Schorske did for fin de siecle Vienna." -- Neil Smith, author of American Empire
"Mr. Harvey handles numerous primary and secondary sources and uses theoretical models effectively to examine the motivations for and and consequences of Baron Haussman's re-creation of Paris. The book is neatly illustrated by art and literature from the period..." -- The New YorkSun
"David Harvey is a noted geographer. Harvey defines modernity as "creative destruction". He is good on destruction and even better on the creative ways it was depicted and resisted. ...it is a handsome volume, and its many illustrations will appeal to many readers
." -- Journal of Regional Science

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