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The Pride of Place: Local Memories and Political Culture in Nineteenth-Century France.


The Pride of Place: Local Memories and Political Culture in Nineteenth-Century France. By Stephane Gerson (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2003. xii plus 324 pp.).

Gustave Flaubert held in horror the suffocating suf·fo·cate  
v. suf·fo·cat·ed, suf·fo·cat·ing, suf·fo·cates

v.tr.
1. To kill or destroy by preventing access of air or oxygen.

2. To impair the respiration of; asphyxiate.

3.
 conventionalism of provincial life, its buttoned-up formality and pretentious-cum-comic erudition er·u·di·tion  
n.
Deep, extensive learning. See Synonyms at knowledge.


Erudition of editors—Hare.

Noun 1.
 a la Bouvard and Pecuchet. Stephane Gerson, however, takes the matter of provincialism pro·vin·cial·ism  
n.
1. A regional word, phrase, pronunciation, or usage.

2. The condition of being provincial; lack of sophistication or perspective. Also called provinciality.

3.
 to heart, mapping the extensive and varied efforts of nineteenth-century Frenchmen to cultivate sentiments of loyalty and affection to hometown and pays.

Gerson's point of entry into the subject is local associational life. He takes the department of the Nord as his principal base of operations Noun 1. base of operations - installation from which a military force initiates operations; "the attack wiped out our forward bases"
base

air base, air station - a base for military aircraft

army base - a large base of operations for an army
 but wanders afield from there, drawing on examples from all over France. An arresting picture emerges in the process. From the 1830s, there was a proliferation of societies, academies, institutes--associations of all kinds--which made a cult of local memory. They inventoried archaeological treasures and place names; they organized pageants and parades; they erected monuments and memorials to regional luminaries. However much learning went into it, this was amateur work. And who were the amateurs so taken up with nurturing pride of place? Gerson characterizes them as "middling bourgeoisie": civil servants, litterateurs, and liberal professionals in the main, joined by a smattering of clergy and businessmen. The promotion of local knowledge might be an end in itself, a form of friendly sociability which brought local notables together, but there was a public face to such activity as well, a desire to instruct the community as a whole in the past virtues and present accomplishments of the pays. The past celebrated, at least in the case of the Nord, tended to be distant, evoking the communes of the middle ages or the counts of Flanders The counts of Flanders were the rulers over the county of Flanders from the 9th century until the abolition of the countship by the French revolutionaries in 1790. . There were political connotations in such choices, but this was politics at a remove. When it came to touting recent accomplishments, however, it was not so easy to keep partisanship at arm's length arm's length adj. the description of an agreement made by two parties freely and independently of each other, and without some special relationship, such as being a relative, having another deal on the side or one party having complete control of the other. . The good burghers Burghers (bûr`gərz), in the 18th cent., a party of the Secession Church of Scotland, resulting from one of the "breaches" in the history of Presbyterianism.  of Montargis (located just south of Paris) set aside a room in the town hall to memorialize me·mo·ri·al·ize  
tr.v. me·mo·ri·al·ized, me·mo·ri·al·iz·ing, me·mo·ri·al·iz·es
1. To provide a memorial for; commemorate.

2. To present a memorial to; petition.
 local greats, and the pantheon they assembled is revelatory, running from the admiral turned Protestant martyr Coligny through the revolutionary orator ORATOR, practice. A good man, skillful in speaking well, and who employs a perfect eloquence to defend causes either public or private. Dupin, Profession d'Avocat, tom. 1, p. 19..
     2.
 Mirabeau to the Romantic painter Girodet. Each in his way embodied a value: Coligny religious toleration, Mirabeau a love of liberty, Girodet a devotion to art as civic-minded uplift (he was student of David's). Toleration, liberty, uplift, it's not hard to put a political label to this package.

These were liberal values, and this is a key part of the story Gerson has to tell. Mid-nineteenth-century liberalism in France drew much of its energy from grass-roots associational networks, bourgeois in composition, which took localism lo·cal·ism  
n.
1.
a. A local linguistic feature.

b. A local custom or peculiarity.

2. Devotion to local interests and customs.
 and amateur learning as their guiding principles. This would be a worthwhile finding in itself, but Gerson gives the story an added twist which redoubles the interest.

Authorities in Paris took cognizance The power, authority, and ability of a judge to determine a particular legal matter. A judge's decision to take note of or deal with a cause.

That which is cognizable to a judge is within the scope of his or her jurisdiction.
 of such local activism and decided to promote it. In 1834, the Minister of Public Instruction Francois Guizot created a Comite des travaux historiques. Through such agencies, the July Monarchy inserted itself into the life of local communities, handing out awards and subsidies, using its weight to sponsor learned projects of its own. But more than that, the regime encouraged local worthies to get together with their counterparts from other towns and locales, to meet in nation-wide congresses for the greater glory of learning and of France itself. Now, Gerson devotes considerable effort to documenting the state's ambivalence about advancing the localist cause. From a certain perspective, such hesitations made sense: too great an accent on parochial matters risked fostering particularist par·tic·u·lar·ism  
n.
1. Exclusive adherence to, dedication to, or interest in one's own group, party, sect, or nation.

2.
 sentiments dangerous to national unity. But the weight of Gerson's evidence shows just how sound Guizot's policy in fact was. The state's interventions kept local societies from wandering down unwelcome political paths; its efforts to create a national culture of erudition brought local notables from all over together, fusing fragmentary local elites into a more cohesive whole. It might be thought that the Second Empire, centralizing and authoritarian (at least at first), would be put off by the liberal-minded symbiosis symbiosis (sĭmbēō`sĭs), the habitual living together of organisms of different species. The term is usually restricted to a dependent relationship that is beneficial to both participants (also called mutualism) but may be extended to  of local and national Guizot had labored so hard to effect, but nothing of the sort. The Empire kept the subsidies flowing. Anxious as it was about its own legitimacy, it saw clear advantages in cosseting local notables who might be persuaded of the usefulness of the regime, if not of its virtue. Guizot's successors, as Guizot himself, understood that smart cultural policy was also smart politics.

No, it was not the Second Empire which upset Guizot's edifice but the Third Republic. Gerson is not always as clear as he might be on how this came about, but the general outlines of the process do come into focus. The 1870s and 1880s witnessed the emergence of new town-based elites, men of more modest social origins than in the past. Did they have a different vision of what local life meant? It's hard to say, but erudition seems to have mattered less to them. They spoke a new vocabulary, touting not so much the particularities of the pays as the virtues of the petite patrie. Pedagogy had mattered to the notables of old but not as much as it did to the new men who wanted to teach a hometown consciousness that would lead citizens to a greater love of nation. Such a municipalist groundswell ground·swell  
n.
1. A sudden gathering of force, as of public opinion: a groundswell of antiwar sentiment.

2.
 might have troubled the elitist Guizot, but not the more democratic-minded men of the Third Republic who embraced it. On occasion, the new localism took a Nationalist turn with the accent on rootedness, on a conception of local identity which froze out outsiders in a way inconsistent with the Republic's putative universalism Universalism

Belief in the salvation of all souls. Arising as early as the time of Origen and at various points in Christian history, the concept became an organized movement in North America in the mid-18th century.
. But even the Nationalist spoke in a populist idiom that would have made the erudite of bygone days uneasy. Long ago, Daniel Halevy characterized the coming of the Republic as la fin des notables. In matters of localism, there was an end of the notables as well.

Gerson sketches in a particular historic epoch, the period 1830 to 1880, when men of means and erudition enjoyed the upper hand in provincial life. They were people of liberal views on the whole, firm believers in learning and localism, and in these beliefs they were not so different from their homologues elsewhere in Europe, whether the Honoratioren of the German hometowns or the Dissenting city fathers of the English Midlands. But they did differ in one respect: in their participation in a nation-wide, state-sponsored network of erudition. There was a statist stat·ism  
n.
The practice or doctrine of giving a centralized government control over economic planning and policy.



statist adj.
 tinge to French liberalism. It is a point Pierre Rosanvallon (1) has been hammering away at for years, and Stephane Gerson's elegant and learned book fleshes it out from a novel angle and with a fine-grained attention to nuance and ambivalence.

Philip Nord

Princeton University

ENDNOTE See footnote.  

1. See, most recently, Pierre Rosanvallon, Le Modele politique francais. La societe civile contre le jacobinisme de 1789 a nos jours (Paris, 2004).
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Author:Nord, Philip
Publication:Journal of Social History
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Sep 22, 2005
Words:1148
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