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Metaphors of the Middle: the Discovery of the Petite Bourgeoisie 1880–1914

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2009

Geoffrey Crossick
Affiliation:
The University of Nottingham

Extract

AFTER a long period of neglect, during which historians had looked towards the petite bourgeoisie primarily to heap upon it the responsibility for fascism, the last fifteen years has seen a growing research interest in the social and political history of die world of small retail, artisanal and manufacturing enterprise. The result of diis attention has been paradoxical, on the one hand establishing the petite bourgeoisie as a focus for sustained research, while on the other confirming how difficult it is to see the owners of small retail and manufacturing enterprise as a coherent social group or social class. The combination of the owner's labour and capital widiin family-centred enterprises might indicate a distinct position for the petite bourgeoisie within the social structure, but various forces militated against a social or demographic identity for die proprietors of small enterprise: the high rate of business turnover, die limited proportion of petits bourgeois who remain in diat position through their careers, and die low rate of continuity between generations. Although political struggle was important in die formation of any class, one could go further widi respect to die petite bourgeoisie and suggest that it was only at times of political crisis and action, only through die discourse and actions of its organisations, diat a petit-bourgeois identity might emerge. It is not surprising, dierefore, diat research has focused above all on diose years between die 1880s and the First World War, when die emergence of interest groups and increasing political mobilisation seemed to offer evidence of a real petit-bourgeois identity.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Historical Society 1994

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References

1 This growth of interest can first be seen in two special issues of Le Mouvement socialL'atelier et la boutique’, 108 (1979)Google Scholar, and Petite entreprise et politique’, 114 (1979)Google Scholar. Subsequent publications include Shopkeepers and Master Artisans in Nineteenth-Century Europe (eds.) Crossick, Geoffrey and Haupt, Heinz-Gerhard (1984)Google Scholar; Nord, Philip G., Paris Shopkeepers and the Politics of Resentment (Princeton, 1986)Google Scholar; Splintered Classes: Politics and the Lower Middle Classes in Interwar Europe (ed.) Koshar, Rudy (New York, 1990)Google Scholar; L'univers politique des classes moyennes (eds.) Lavau, Georges et al. (Paris, 1983)Google Scholar; Zdatny, Steven M., The Politics of Survival. Artisans in Twentieth-Century France (New York, 1990)Google Scholar; Aux frontières des classes moyennes. La petite bourgeoisie beige avant 1914 (eds.) Kurgan, G. and Jaumain, Serge (Brussels, 1992)Google Scholar; Morris, Jonathan, The political economy of shopkeeping in Milan 1886–1922 (Cambridge, 1993)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. I am grateful to Peter Heyrman, Serge Jaumain and Leen Van Molle for helpful discussions in the early stages of this research, and also to Heinz-Gerhard Haupt and Sylvie Taschereau for valuable comments on an earlier version of this paper.

2 These other strands of analysis have received little attention. For French radicalism and the classe moyenne, see Berstein, Serge, ‘Le Parti Radical-Socialiste, de la défense du peuple à celle des classes moyennes’, in Lavau, , L'umvers politique, 7193Google Scholar. For French socialists Madeleine Rebérioux, Les socialistes français et le petit commerce au toumant du siècle’, le mouvement social, 114 (1981), 5770Google Scholar.

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17 See the publications of the Musée social, its Annales as well as its Memoires et Documents. Éetienne Martin Saint-Léon's report on ‘Le IIIe Congrès international lies classes moyennes’ in Le Musée social, December 1911, 357–79 is a rare and low-key exception. On the institution itself, see Elwitt, Sanford, ‘Social reform and social order in late nineteenth-century France: the Musée Social and its friends’, French Historical Studies, XI (19791980), 431–51Google Scholar.

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46 The German example is a continuing thread in Brants, Petite industrie, but one over which he is cautious.

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51 E.g. Deherme, Georges, Les classes moyenne. Etude sur le parasitisme social (Paris, 1912)Google Scholar, which stressed not only shopkeepers but civil servants as well for the purpose of ridicule.

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55 This was an assumption which shopkeeper representatives might contest, as when they insisted that associations could not bring to retailers the benefits which artisans might enjoy. See the interventions by Moens, and Cutsem, Attout-Van too the session on associations at the 1899 Congress, Congrès International de la Petite Bourgeoisie 1899, 363–8Google Scholar.

56 Clement, Henry, ‘Les classes moyennes’, La Réforme sociale, LXIV (1912), 706Google Scholar. The essay is a review of the book by Georges Deherme referred to above.

57 Brants, , La petite Industrie, 167Google Scholar.

58 ibid., 159; Funck-Brentano, Fr. in Congres International de la Petite Bourgeoisie 1899, 94Google Scholar.

59 Turmann, , ‘Un aspect du probleme’, 461Google Scholar.

60 Clercq, P. -J. de, ‘Les Artisans’, IICM Bulletin, 12 1908Google Scholar.

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63 Brants, , La lutte, 262Google Scholar.

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66 Boltanski, Luc, Les cadres. La formation d'un groupe social (Paris, 1982)Google Scholar; Maurice Halbwachs, ‘Les caractéristiques des classes moyennes’, in Aron, , Inventaires III, 2852Google Scholar. See also a discussion rooted in the debates of the interwar period, Moulin, Leo and Aerts, Luc, ‘Les classes moyennes. Essai de bibliographic critique d'une définition’, Revue d'histoire économique et sodale, (1954), 168186, 293–309Google Scholar.

67 Brants, Victor, ‘Les employés’, La Réform sociale, LVIII (1909), 619Google Scholar. As early as 1883 Feyeux was rejecting the possibility that managers and employees could play such a role: Feyeux, A., ‘La question des grands et des petits magasins’, La Réform sociale, V (1883), 361Google Scholar.

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69 Moride, Pierre, Les Maisons à succursales multiples en France et à l'étranger (Paris, 1913), 192–3Google Scholar. Note the or, in ‘their labour or their capital’, removing the key linkage that described the classic petite bourgeoisie. For a similar argument, this time from the Director of the Statistique générate de la France, see March, Lucien, ‘La concentration dans les industries de fabrication, d'entretien, etc’, in La Concentration des entreprises industrielles et commerciales. Conferences faites à l'Ecole des Hautes Etudes sociales (ed.) Fontaine, A. (Paris, 1913), 71Google Scholar. Social catholic defenders of consumer co-operatives followed an equivalent path, presenting the managers of co-operative stores and the workers who accumulated savings through their dividend as forces constructing a newb classe moyenne. See the contributions of Welche and Récamier to the discussion on consumer co-operation at the Société d'Econamie sociale, in La Réforme sociale, XXV (1893), 461–4Google Scholar.

70 Congrès International de la Petite Bourgeoisie 1899, 89.

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76 E. Dusaugey, Director of the Société d'énergie électrique de Grenoble, quoted in Dubois, Ernest and Julin, Armand, Les Moteurs électriques dans les industries à domicile (Brussels, 1902), 274Google Scholar. Optimistic faith in the power of electricity was widespread in these years—one historian has written of an ‘electromania’ seizing French society in the last twenty years of the nineteenth century. See Beltran, Alain, ‘Du luxe au coeur du système. Electricité et société dans la région parisienne (1880–1939)’, Annales E.S.C. (1989), 1114Google Scholar. It is interesting to note how this enthusiasm was used by different groups to sustain such very varying views of progress.

77 IICM Bulletin, August 1905

78 Morel-Journel, Henry, ‘Le Réveil des classes moyennes en France’, in Société d'Economie politique et d'Economie sociale de Lyon, Comple Rendu Analytique des Séances de l'Année 1910–1911 (Lyon, 1911), 54103Google Scholar.

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83 Pyfferoen, Oscar in Comte rendu sténographique du 2ème Congrès international de la Petite Bourgeoisie, term à Namur le 15 et 16 septembre 1901 (Namur, 1902), 64–5Google Scholar. The brief emergence of consumer associations directed to encouraging ethical shopping practices, such as the responsible settlement of debts to shopkeepers and the purchase only of produce manufactured without sweated labour, responded to the same anxieties. See Deslandres, Maurice, L'Acheteur, son rôle économique et social: les ligues sociales d'achteurs (Paris, 1911)Google Scholar; the report of La Ligue nationale du paiement comptant (Belgium) in Compte Rendu Sténographique du IVème Congrès national de la petite bourgeoisie term à Saint-Trond les 4, 5 et 6 août 1907 (Saint Trond, 1907), 8794Google Scholar; and the brief discussion in Williams, Rosalind H., Dream Worlds: Mass Consumption in Late Nineteenth-Century France (Berkeley, 1982), 303–10Google Scholar.

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86 Lambrechts, Hector, ‘De l'Avenir des Classes Moyennes’, IICM Bulletin, 02 1911Google Scholar. See also Théophile Funck-Brentano, ‘Préface’, in Maroussem, Paul du, La Question ouvrière. vol. 1. Charpentiers de Paris. Companons et Indépendents (Paris, 1891), 16Google Scholar.

87 IICM Bulletin, June/July 1911, 456. See also Saint-Léon, Martin, Petit commerce, 16Google Scholar.

88 Feyeux, Albert, ‘Un nouveau livre des métiers—I. La boulangerie parisienne’, La science sociale, IV (1887), 341Google Scholar.

89 Du Maroussem, Question ouvrière, passim.

90 Blondel, , ‘Le problème’, IICM Bulletin, 04 1908Google Scholar. For contemporary critiques of the department store, see Miller, Michael B., The Bon Marché. Bourgeois Culture and the Department Store, 1869–1920 (Princeton, 1981), 190 ffGoogle Scholar.

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93 G. Verbiest, ibid., 219–33.

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95 Van Molle, Chacun pour tous. For France, , Les Classes Moyennes dans le Commerce et l'Industrie, 71–2Google Scholar.

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97 In addition to the international congresses of 1899 and 1901 cited above, the Institut international pour l'étude des problèms des classes moyennes organised further congresses including one in Munich in 1911, whose proceedings were published as III. Congrès international des classes moyennes (Munich, 1912)Google Scholar. The Belgian Association national? pour l'etude et la défense des intérêts de la petite bourgeoisie, founded in 1900 as a result of the 1899 Antwerp congress, organised a series of national congresses, all of whose proceedings were published. The proceedings of the 4th Congress at Saint-Trond are cited above.

98 For the operation of that strategy in Belgium, see Jaumain, Serge and Gaiardo, Lucia, ‘“Aide-toi et le gouvernement t'aidera'”. Les responses de l'état à la crise de la petite bourgeoisie (1880–1914)’, Revue belge d'histoire contemporaine, XLX (1988), 417–71Google Scholar. Bernard, Du mouvement d'organisation is a detailed study directed at just such a strategy of turning shopkeepers away from demands of the state.

99 Lambrechts, , Le problème social, 254Google Scholar.

100 A note from the Association des commerçants de la Louvière was read out by the Chairman of the session on co-operatives: Congrès International de la Petite Bourgeoisie 1899, 217–19.

101 Hector Labrechts was later to recall ‘the fluctuating terminology at the time’. Lambrechts, , Trente Années, 316Google Scholar.

102 Aynard, Edouard, at Closing Banquet, Les Classes Moyennes dans le Commerce et l'Industrie, 124Google Scholar.

103 Brants acknowledged this, writing that ‘it is the movement, the agitation which has provoked the research, and we are sure that this time it has not been without value to science.’ Brants, , La petite industrie, 56Google Scholar.

104 There is an increasing literature on these movements, of which the most important works are Nord, Paris Shopkeepers, Jaumain, , ‘Petits commerçants’, 473527Google Scholar. See also various essays, especially the national surveys, in Crossick & Haupt, Shopkeepers and Master Artisans.

105 Lebon, M., to Congrès international de la boulangerie, 28 & 29 août 1910 (Louvain, 1910), 90Google Scholar.

106 Congrès international de la Petite Bourgeoisie 1901, 114–15.

107 For this careful management, see Jaumain, , ‘Petits commerçants’, 456 ffGoogle Scholar.

108 The terminology of description merits further attention, distinguishing not only between countries and languages, but also between different actors, such as outside observers, national leaders, local organisations and so on. For some preliminary findings on Belgium, see Hentenryk, G. Kurgan-Van, ‘A la recherche de la petite bourgeoisie: l'enquête orale de 1902–1904’, Revue belge d'histovre contemporaine, XIV (1983), 295–7Google Scholar. The generalisation on self-description rests upon my reading of various shopkeeper newspapers for Lyon in the decade or so before the First World War, especially L'Alliance and Le Courier du Commerce. Crossick, Geoffrey, ‘From gentleman to the residuum: languages of social description in Victorian Britain’, in Language, History and Class (ed.) Corfield, Penelope J. (Oxford), 1991), 150–78Google Scholar, a general discussion of the vocabulary of social description in Britain, contains brief comments on the English terminology of lower middle class, 173–4.

109 Bourdieu, Pierre, ‘La paysannerie, une classe objet’, Actes de la recherche en sciences societies, 17–18 (1977), 25Google Scholar.