Cafes and the Parisian Working Class
Paris had some 3,000 cafes in 1789, 4,500 in the late 1840s, 22,000
in 1870, 42,000 in the mid-1880s, and around 30,000 from the late
1880s to 1914. Moreover, Paris had in 1909 a higher ratio of cafes
to residents (11.25 cafes to a thousand inhabitants) than
comparable cities in Europe or the United States, and many were
frequented by the working class (pp. 3-4). Numbers aside, cafes
had a remarkable presence in the political, social, cultural, and
intellectual life of nineteenth-century Paris. They have been
associated with Gracchus Babeuf's Conspiracy of Equals; with true
as well as literary crime, including the "exotic criminality" of
Eugene Sue's fictional Tapis franc, or thieves' den of pre-
Haussmann Paris. Haine finds Parisian cafes in the first showing
of a motion picture by the Lumière brothers in 1895; in the songs
of Aristide Bruant, who celebrated aspects of cafe life, and in the
prints of Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, who evoked the ambience as
well as the personalities of turn-of-the century cafes like the
Moulin de la Galette. Although Haine provides the evidence for
this sketch of Parisian cafe life, his subject is the working-class
cafe, offering workers a unique space within which developed a
"distinctive subculture" with its own order, structure, and rituals
(p. 2). The result is a stimulating, well-written, richly
documented, not to mention entertaining and immensely informative
study of the location and function of the cafe in Parisian working-
class life and sociability between the French Revolution and the
beginning of World War I.
The World of the Paris Cafe contains eight topical
chapters, and they treat respectively the perception, regulation,
and policing of the cafe; the cafe in the context of family life
and housing; the cafe and work; the cafe and the drinking
experience; the cafe and the publican; the cafe and the etiquette
of sociability; the cafe and gender politics; and the cafe and
politics. There is also a brief conclusion, a discussion of
historiography and methodology, and a bibliographic essay. Most
chapters are structured chronologically, which occasions some
repetition and makes difficult both the delineation of a composite
image of the cafe at a given historical moment and comparisons
across different periods. Be that as it may, Haine traces changes
as well as continuities in the perception and nature of the cafe
and cafe sociability, and he stresses the positive function of the
cafe in the evolution of working-class life since the eighteenth
century. In so doing, he explicitly challenges both
contemporaries, who viewed cafes as places of sinful behavior,
dangerous opposition politics, or moral degeneration, and more
recent historians, who have paid them scant heed. "The nineteenth-
century Paris cafe," he writes, "was a transitional space between
the essentially public world of early-modern lower-class life,
epitomized by the street and the marketplace, and the essentially
private world of late-twentieth-century workers, usually living in
high-rise apartment complexes. As an informal institution that
bridged the distance between public and private life, leisure and
work, the individual and the family, the cafe provided a unique
space in which the tensions arising from such juxtapositions could
be articulated" (p. 236).
The nature of the cafe as an intermediate and
mediating institution provides a unique perspective for the study
of working-class sociability. Parisian cafes provided workers with
"an accessible, public, and open forum for social life" (p. ix).
And, they could become "cauldrons of conversation and thought" (p.
1), "a primary circuit for Parisian social networks" (p. 2), a
"living room for the working class" and "an annex to the workshop
and factory" (p. 59), a "theater of neighborhood life" (p. 163),
substitutes "for the parliaments, clubs, and salons of the upper
classes" (p. 235), and "potential bridge[s] between the ordinary
world and the festival time of carnival and revolution" (pp.
237-238). Finally, and perhaps most important for Haine, cafe
space and cafe sociability made possible the growth of a
"proletarian public sphere" and helped foster "a latent class
consciousness" that on occasion had political consequences (p.
207).
Haine groups working-class activities within the
cafe space into the three broad categories of "shelter, incubator,
and stage" (pp. 234-235). During the nineteenth century, when the
life of the Parisian worker underwent wrenching dislocations--
ranging from political oppression and inadequate housing to
increasing workplace discipline--the cafe provided a sheltered
space where the worker could fraternize and express himself.
Secondly, the cafe provided space where political or labor actions
could originate and grow and where the worker could protest, using
methods ranging from the verbal insult to strikes and riots.
Third, the cafe provided a space where workers, employers, and
publicans could act out a variety of social roles. Such
sociability, in short, "helped preserve the preindustrial
connection between work and community life and provided a valuable
space in times of strikes" (p. x); it enhanced the lives of workers
who had few material possessions; and it included positive and
varied roles for women. Accordingly, Haine argues that cafe
sociability, far from undermining family life, actually enhanced
it. In the substantial chapter on working-class politics, Haine
treats the role of the cafe in the revolutionary eruptions of
1789-1794, 1830, 1848, and 1870-1871 and attempts to account for
the failure of the French to develop a disciplined and militant
organization, arguing nonetheless that cafe sociability helped
create and spread new ideas during periods of free expression.
During the times of repression following these revolutions, cafes
served as shelters and as places where the working classes could
express themselves by insulting government officials and the
police.
Haine's book is based upon an impressive range of
archival and published sources. These include judicial records
after 1870, especially those dealing with the sorts of petty
incidents which took place in cafes, civil archives (including
bankruptcy records), newspaper accounts, contemporary published
accounts, novels, and studies by modern historians. He uses these
sources to study the cafe from a double perspective, emphasizing
simultaneously the changing historical character and role of the
cafe and the "legitimate and constant social needs served by
drinking establishments" (p. 242). His choice to portray
individuals and their actions within the cafe space by combining
impersonal statistics with the "voices" of individual men and women
culled from the archives, is on the whole quite successful, and it
enhances the book's readability and interest.
The considerable merits of this book
notwithstanding, several matters warrant additional attention. On
the question of just who frequented the working-class cafe and
participated in its sociability, Haine is not always clear,
especially with regard to men (though in contrast, he provides a
concise profile of the female cafe-goer [pp. 193-199]). Early on,
he suggests that more than 80% of the Parisian population
frequenting cafes belonged not only to the working class of his
title but also to the petite bourgeoisie (pp. 2-3). But it is
difficult to make cogent generalizations about the attitudes and
behavior of a group which extends from day laborers to small
shopkeepers and white-collar clerks. Elsewhere, he notes that cafe
goers were mostly "skilled and well-paid artisans" (p. 65), not,
for example, the factory workers who favored other amusements (p.
87) and that most were aged thirty or more. Accordingly, the
actual cafe-going population appears to be a relatively select
group. In addition, the inclusion of the petite bourgeoisie within
the working-class cafe population is made problematical by studies
such as those by Geoffrey Crossick and Heinz-Gerhard Haupt (most
recently: The Petite Bourgeoisie in Europe, 1780-1914: Enterprise,
Family and Independence [London and New York, 1995]) which find the
values and worries of the petite bourgeoisie to be largely distinct
from those of the working class.
A second concern involves the use of the term cafe,
understandably utilized by Haine in the most inclusive sense, but
such usage means that he sometimes blurs distinctions by referring
to an extraordinary range of institutions, from the goguettes,
cafes where workers sang but which also were structured, organized,
and required admission fees, guinguettes, or barrière taverns, to
neighborhood cafes, to mention but a few. He also uses
interchangeably the terms "working-class cafe" and "proletarian
cafe", but he often provides examples, such as quotes from Ralph
Waldo Emerson or Jules Janin on the importance of the cafe and
conversation, which appear to refer to cafes other than those
frequented by the working class. Finally, there is the matter of
pictorial images, a potentially rich, if problematical source.
Inserted just before the first chapter are twelve illustrations,
but none are discussed in the text, and the criteria used for their
selection are unclear. The omission is unfortunate, for they offer
intriguing vignettes of cafe sociability and invite discussion. To
take one example: an 1868 image from the Journal pour tous seems
to show a cafe scene in which a vigorous woman wrests a wine bottle
from an inebriated man who is restrained by a young girl while two
men watch from the background and another appears poised to
intervene. The provided caption, which says nothing more than
women "were willing to assert themselves when necessary", hardly
explains the personal and social roles and relationships depicted
(p. xiii).
Such reservations aside, there is much to learn
from The World of the Paris Cafe and much to enjoy. There are,
for example, such unexpected pleasures as a mini-essay on the
vocabulary of drinking (pp. 104-107), an analysis of the importance
of the rise of the modern serving counter after 1821 (pp. 121-122;
130-133), and a brief discussion of absinthe drinking (pp. 95-98).
Scattered throughout the book are insightful asides, such as how
the rebuilding of Paris in the mid-nineteenth century altered
Parisian working-class life. Discussing police surveillance of
cafes during the Second Empire, Haine observes: "Uniform and
pervasive surveillance formed an ideal complement to Haussmann's
transformation, which opened up and regularized Parisian urban
space... While many scholars have noted the military advantages of
the broad, straight new boulevards, virtually no one has indicated
how they served to facilitate police regulation as well. These
broad boulevards and the increasing shift in commerce from the
street to the shop permitted the police to scan cafe life more
easily and efficiently. Only on the side streets did the old-
fashioned sort of dense sociability persist, but these were now
peripheral to the new Paris" (pp. 26-27). And, finally, Haine
provides new insights into questions often debated by historians,
refuting, for example, the argument that poor housing "pushed" the
worker into the cafe.
Haine's World of the Paris Cafe accordingly
takes its place alongside such recent studies as Thomas Brennan's
Public Drinking and Popular Culture in Eighteenth-Century Paris
(Princeton, 1988); the sections on wineshops and guinguettes in
David Garrioch's Neighbourhood and Community in Paris, 1740-1790
(Cambridge, 1986); and the several essays of Susanna Barrows,
including "Nineteenth-Century Cafes: Arenas of Everyday Life", in
Pleasures of Paris: Daumier to Picasso, ed. Barbara Stern Shapiro
(Boston, 1991). Read together, these works provide a nuanced
portrayal of the place of cafes--called variously "cathedrals of
the poor" by the disapproving social critic Paul Leroy-Beaulieu and
"salons of democracy" by Leon Gambetta--in Parisian life during the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries (Barrows, pp. 17 and 24).
Robert W. Brown
University of North Carolina at Pembroke
rwb@pembvax1.pembroke.edu
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