
Consumer Chronicles
Cultures of Consumption in Modern French Literature
David H. Walker(Author)
Liverpool University Press
Published on 31. March 2011
Book
Hardback
288 pages
978-1-84631-487-2 (ISBN)
Description
At a time when the world is contemplating the depletion of non-renewable natural resources, the consumer society is increasingly being called into question. This is nowhere more acutely evident than in France, where since its beginnings in the nineteenth century, the consumer revolution, extending market forces into every area of social and private life, has been perceived as a challenge to core elements in French culture, such as traditional artisan crafts and small businesses serving local communities. Cultural historians and sociologists have charted the increasing commercialisation of everyday life over the twentieth century, but few have paid systematic attention to the crucial testimony provided by the authors of narrative fiction. Consumer Chronicles rectifies this omission by means of close readings of a series of novels, selected for their authentic portrayal of consumer behaviour, and analysed in relation to their social, cultural and historical contexts. Walker's study, offering an imaginative interdisciplinary panorama covering the impact of affluence on French shoppers, shopkeepers and society, provides telling new insights into the history and characteristics of the consumer mentality.
Reviews / Votes
Consumer Chronicles offers scholars and undergraduates alike fresh purchase not only on the development of consumer culture in modern France, and on literary and theoretical engagements with it, but also on their own practices of critical consumption. * French Studies, vol 66, no 1 * Walker's prose remains clear, readable, even playful. The greatest strength of this book lies in the author's ability to synthesize vast amounts of information from primary and secondary works in order to tell a coherent story. Works of fiction unfold in time and in tandem with a thoroughly documented history of consumer culture in modern France. * H-France Review Vol. 12, No. 18 * It is a work of impeccable scholarship, and possesses the virtues of ample illustration, detailed demonstration, and the relentless, exhaustive pursuit of a single broad topic.David Bellos Walker's clear exposition of the progression of his argument at every stage is helpful, if occasionally repetitive. His work is itself a treasure trove of references to literary and historical texts that discuss the evolution and importance of shopping in the modern period. Readers of modern French literature with an eye for consumer economics will undoubtedly get their money's worth from this volume.
Beth Gerwin, Modern Language Review, Vol. 107, Part 4
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Liverpool
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 239 mm
Width: 163 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-84631-487-2 (9781846314872)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
David H. Walker is Professor of French at the University of Sheffield and was formerly President of the Society for French Studies and President of the Association of University Professors of French. His books include 'Outrage and Insight: Modern French Writers and the 'fait divers''. Oxford, Berg French Studies, 1995 and a number of critical editions of the work of Andre Gide.
Author
School of Modern Languages and Linguistics, University of Sheffield (United Kingdom)
Content
Acknowledgements
Introduction
I. WAITING FOR THE CONSUMER SOCIETY
1. Earning, Yearning and Making Do: Huysmans, 'Les Soeurs Vatard'
2. 'Flaneurs and Shoppers: Huysmans, 'En menage'
3. From Shopping to Schopenhauer: Huysmans, ' A vau- l'eau'
II. ECONOMIES OF CONSUMPTION (1)
4. Transactions and Value: Gide, 'L'Immoraliste'
III. SMALL SHOPS
5. 'La lente Agonie du petit commerce? Balzac, 'Grandeur et decadence de Cesar Birotteau' and Zola, 'Au bonheur des dames'
6. 'Eleve dans le commerce: Celine, 'Mort a credit'
7. The Emprium Strikes Back: Dutourd, 'Au Bon Beurre'
IV. BIG STORES
8. The Big Sell
9. The 'grand magasin': Zola, 'Au bonheur des dames (2)'
10.'Les Venus des comptoirs' : Feminism and Shopping in the 1920's
11. Total Retail: Figures of the Dystopian Superstore
V. ECONOMIES OF COMSUMPTION (2)
12. Speculations on Value
VI. REFLECTIONS ON THE CONSUMER SOCIETY
13. Post-wr visions of Paradise: The Dawning of the Consumer Society
14. Managing the Consumers (1): Motivational Analysts
15. Managing the Consumers (2) Advertisers
16. The Consumers Managing 1: Making Do by Instalments
17. The Consumers Managing 2: Making Do and Producing
Conclusion: A Good Buy?
Bibliography
Index
Introduction
I. WAITING FOR THE CONSUMER SOCIETY
1. Earning, Yearning and Making Do: Huysmans, 'Les Soeurs Vatard'
2. 'Flaneurs and Shoppers: Huysmans, 'En menage'
3. From Shopping to Schopenhauer: Huysmans, ' A vau- l'eau'
II. ECONOMIES OF CONSUMPTION (1)
4. Transactions and Value: Gide, 'L'Immoraliste'
III. SMALL SHOPS
5. 'La lente Agonie du petit commerce? Balzac, 'Grandeur et decadence de Cesar Birotteau' and Zola, 'Au bonheur des dames'
6. 'Eleve dans le commerce: Celine, 'Mort a credit'
7. The Emprium Strikes Back: Dutourd, 'Au Bon Beurre'
IV. BIG STORES
8. The Big Sell
9. The 'grand magasin': Zola, 'Au bonheur des dames (2)'
10.'Les Venus des comptoirs' : Feminism and Shopping in the 1920's
11. Total Retail: Figures of the Dystopian Superstore
V. ECONOMIES OF COMSUMPTION (2)
12. Speculations on Value
VI. REFLECTIONS ON THE CONSUMER SOCIETY
13. Post-wr visions of Paradise: The Dawning of the Consumer Society
14. Managing the Consumers (1): Motivational Analysts
15. Managing the Consumers (2) Advertisers
16. The Consumers Managing 1: Making Do by Instalments
17. The Consumers Managing 2: Making Do and Producing
Conclusion: A Good Buy?
Bibliography
Index