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Reviews for Fragile Lives: Violence, Power, and Solidarity in Eighteenth-Century Paris

 Fragile Lives magazine reviews

The average rating for Fragile Lives: Violence, Power, and Solidarity in Eighteenth-Century Paris based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2013-03-05 00:00:00
1993was given a rating of 4 stars Thor Heimdahl
Fragile Lives covers the world of 18th century Paris and the common folk who inhabited it. There are three foci to this within the book. They are, women and children, labor, and crowds/phenomena. All in all this book was really amazing. The way in which Farge painted a pictured of the working classes of Paris using only archival evidence was quite astounding. That being said it was also a bit hard to get through, and the quirks of European history writing appear frequently in this book. That being said it was a well done piece of history.
Review # 2 was written on 2016-09-05 00:00:00
1993was given a rating of 4 stars Jim Como
(3.5) "When they die, Wilde wrote, all good Americans go to Paris. Some of us have always tried to get there early and beat the crowds." Gopnik, a Francophile and New Yorker writer, lived in Paris for five years in the late 1990s with his wife and son (and, towards the end of their sojourn, a newborn daughter). Like Julian Barnes's Something to Declare or Geoff Dyer's Working the Room, this is a random set of essays arising from the author's experience and interests. By choosing any subject that took his fancy at the time - whether the World Cup, a Nazi war crimes trial, fashion, or gastronomy - Gopnik gleefully flouts conventions of theme and narrative, yet still manages to convey the trajectory of his years in Paris, generally through his young son Luke's development, as in "He saw, I realized, exactly the way that after five years I spoke French, which also involved a lot of clinging to the side of the pool and sudden bravura dashes out to the deep end to impress the girls, or listeners." Gopnik is at his best when writing about food (my favorite of his books is The Table Comes First) and bureaucracy: "The French birth certificate was like the first paragraph of a nineteenth-century novel, with the baby's parents' names, their occupations, the years of their births and of their emigration, their residence, and her number, baby number 2365 born in Neuilly in 1999." It's interesting to hear about Halloween creeping into France, as it's also done in the UK. In places, though, this does feel exceptionally dated: relying on a copy shop to do the household bills; David Beckham only being engaged to Posh Spice at the time of a World Cup game. What's timeless, though, are his insights about the ambivalence of the expatriate experience, which certainly resonated for me: The loneliness of the expatriate is of an odd and complicated kind, for it is inseparable from the feeling of being free, of having escaped. There are times, as one reads about the uninsured and the armed and the executed, when French anti-Americanism begins to look extremely rational. It is soup, beautiful soup, that I miss more than anything, not French soup, all puréed and homogenized, but American soup, with bits and things, beans and corn and even letters, in it. "We have a beautiful existence in Paris, but not a full life," Martha said, summing it up, "and in New York we have a full life and an unbeautiful existence." I must thank my Goodreads friend Ted Schmeckpeper for passing this book along to me.


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