
@article{ref1,
title="Local Life in Working-Class Paris at the end of the Nineteenth Century",
journal="Journal of urban history",
year="2006",
author="Faure, Alain",
volume="32",
number="5",
pages="761-772",
abstract="This article questions the emphasis that many historians have placed on community and solidarity in nineteenth-century working-class neighborhoods, and the associated idea that these values were under-mined by improved housing, social welfare systems, urban transit, and growing links with the outside world. Taking late nineteenth-century Paris as a case study, it shows that working-class neighborhoods always contained strong internal tensions and that forced proximity did not necessarily create solidarity. Far from being communitarian in outlook, people had a strong sense of private life and of boundaries. Poverty and unstable employment made residential and daily mobility so high, well before mass transit arrived, that attachment to a single neighborhood was impossible. Neighborhood solidarities did exist, but they were only one small aspect of urban life.<p />",
language="",
issn="0096-1442",
doi="10.1177/0096144206287098",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0096144206287098"
}