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Press, Revolution, and Social Identities in France, 1830-1835
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Press, Revolution, and Social Identities in France, 1830-1835
Current price: $111.95
Barnes and Noble
Press, Revolution, and Social Identities in France, 1830-1835
Current price: $111.95
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Nowhere was this process more visible than in Lyon, the great manufacturing center where the aftershocks of the July Revolution of 1830 were strongest. In July 1830 Lyon’s population had rallied around its liberal newspaper and opposed the conservative Restoration government. In less than two years, however, Lyon’s press and its public opinion, like those of the country as a whole, had become irrevocably fragmented. Popkin shows how the structure of the "journalistic field" in liberal society multiplied political conflicts and produced new tensions between the domains of politics and culture. New periodicals appeared claiming to speak for workers, for women, and for the local interests of Lyon. The public was becoming inherently plural with the emergence of new "imagined communities" that would dominate French public life well into the twentieth century.
Jeremy Popkin is well known for his earlier studies of journalism during the eighteenth century and the French Revolution. In
, he not only moves forward in time but also offers a new model for a cultural history of journalism and its relationship to literature.