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The shape and pace of production was changing; that much was a commonplace of the time. It was a matter of choice---or perhaps sometimes of experience- whether one stressed in the 1860s the positive or the negative in the new situation: the ruinous effects of the trade treaties and foreign competition, or the marvels in the shopwindows of La Samaritaine; the volume of production, or the shoddiness of the goods; the self-made men, or the bankrupts.
I may be forced in what follows to water down Genevoix's rhetoric a little, but I want to persuade the reader of its general sense; for it was certainly true that the grands magasins were the signs--the instruments- of one form of capital's replacing another; and in that they obeyed the general logic of Haussmannization. Were they not built (the voice is approximately Genevoix's again, but it could as well be Lazare's or Gambetta's) with profits derived from the new boulevards and property speculation? Were not the Pereires behind them? Had they not usurped the city's best spaces, lining the Rue de Rivoli, facing the barracks across the Place du Chateau d'Eau and hemming in the Opera? Did they not depend, with windows all hissing with gas till well past nightfall- till ten o'clock in some cases---on the baron's policemen, his buses and trains, his wide sidewalks, and his passion for "circulation"? The stores were everything the opposition came to hate and blame on empire. They were the ruin of the small man. They appeared to grow fat on a diet of merger, speculation, and sudden collapse, and in 1870 it was far from clear that these erratic movements of capital had ceased. (The year before, two of the biggest shops in town, the Diable Boiteux and the Fille Mal Gardee, had combined to form one still larger called La Sa maritaine.) The stores were bureaucracies, and the clerks and sales assistants employed in them were no doubt a shiftless and untrustworthy lot: in 1869 they went on strike, demanding a twelve-hour day and holidays on Sundays. Varlin himself exulted at the sight of old divisions ending "which had up to now made workers and shop assistants two different classes." The strike was broken and the counter-jumpers went back to work on worse terms than before, but the very fact of the struggle confirmed the worse fears of honest republicans. The grands magasins des nouveautes depended, as their name was meant to imply, on buying and selling at speed and in volume. They vied with one another for a multiplicity of lines and "confections"; their shelves were cleared from month to month; they staked everything on fixed prices, low mark-up, and high turnover of stock . They boasted of their ability to mobilize provincial workshops and call on commodities from England, Egypt, or Kashmir. The stores, one might say, put an end to the privacy of consumption: they took the commodity out of the quartier and made its purchase a matter of more or less impersonal skill. (No more negotiation face to face, no more pretence of putting one's reputation in jeopardy each time one bought a bolt of worsted or a new frying pan!) The great floors of the Grands Magasins du Louvre were a space any bourgeois could reach and enter, and many did so for fun. They were a kind of open stage on which the shopper strode purposefully and the commodity prompted; they invited the consumer to relish her own expertise and keep it quiet--not to bargain but to look for bargains, not to have a dress cut out to size but to choose the one which was somehow "just right" from the fifty-four crinolines on show.90
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Glove Counter at Au Bon Marche 1889 |