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9. After the Culture of Production: The Paradox of Labor and Citizenship
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter I
- Contents VII
- Illustrations IX
- Acknowledgments XIII
- INTRODUCTION. Representation, Style, and Taste: The Politics of Everyday Life 1
-
PART ONE. The Paradox of Absolutism: The Power of the Monarch's Limits
- 1. The Courtly Stylistic Regime: Representation and Power under Absolutism 35
- 2. Negotiating Absolute Power: City, Crown, and Church 75
- 3. Fathers, Masters, and Kings: Mirroring Monarchical Power 110
-
PART TWO. From Style to Taste: Transitions to the Bourgeois Stylistic Regime
- 4. Revolutionary Transformation: The Demise of the Culture of Production and of the Courtly Stylistic Regime 147
- 5. The New Politics of the Everyday: Making Class through Taste and Knowledge 186
- 6. The Separation of Aesthetics and Productive Labor 225
-
PART THREE. The Bourgeois Stylistic Regime: Representation, Nation, State, and the Everyday
- 7. The Bourgeoisie as Consumers: Social Representation and Power in the Third Republic 261
- 8. Style in the New Commercial World 306
- 9. After the Culture of Production: The Paradox of Labor and Citizenship 351
- 10. Style, the Nation, and the Market: The Paradoxes of Representation in a Capitalist Republic 377
- EPILOGUE. Toward a Mass Stylistic Regime: The Citizen-Consumer 415
- Bibliography 427
- General Index 469
- Index of Names 493
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter I
- Contents VII
- Illustrations IX
- Acknowledgments XIII
- INTRODUCTION. Representation, Style, and Taste: The Politics of Everyday Life 1
-
PART ONE. The Paradox of Absolutism: The Power of the Monarch's Limits
- 1. The Courtly Stylistic Regime: Representation and Power under Absolutism 35
- 2. Negotiating Absolute Power: City, Crown, and Church 75
- 3. Fathers, Masters, and Kings: Mirroring Monarchical Power 110
-
PART TWO. From Style to Taste: Transitions to the Bourgeois Stylistic Regime
- 4. Revolutionary Transformation: The Demise of the Culture of Production and of the Courtly Stylistic Regime 147
- 5. The New Politics of the Everyday: Making Class through Taste and Knowledge 186
- 6. The Separation of Aesthetics and Productive Labor 225
-
PART THREE. The Bourgeois Stylistic Regime: Representation, Nation, State, and the Everyday
- 7. The Bourgeoisie as Consumers: Social Representation and Power in the Third Republic 261
- 8. Style in the New Commercial World 306
- 9. After the Culture of Production: The Paradox of Labor and Citizenship 351
- 10. Style, the Nation, and the Market: The Paradoxes of Representation in a Capitalist Republic 377
- EPILOGUE. Toward a Mass Stylistic Regime: The Citizen-Consumer 415
- Bibliography 427
- General Index 469
- Index of Names 493