Cronin Vincent
Paris : city of light, 1919-1939
For adults. Paris between the wars: our impression is one of gaiety, frivolity, fashion, of exuberant living - a city whose lights were put out by the terrifyingly rapid advance of the German panzers in 1940. And so, in some ways, it was. But as Vincent Cronin shows in this compelling and original book - which encompasses social, intellectual, political and cultural history - the full picture was much more complex. Cronin examines developments in the arts, fashion and politics, and has something surprising to say about each of them; but also investigates the achievements of Parisian philosophers and industrialists. It is notoriously difficult to perceive valid patterns across such a broad range of human activities as these, but that is exactly what Cronin has done. The result is a thoroughly convincing and engrossing portrait of a city outwardly confident and intent on enjoying life, but behind that uncertain, divided and ultimately incapable of standing up to aggression.
État
D'occasion - Bon
Langue
Anglais
Groupe d'article
Livre - Couverture rigide
Année
1995
Éditeur
HarperCollins
EAN
9780002151917
Illustré
Oui
Jaquette
Pas présent
Numéro d'article
10054418
334 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm