Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-v9fdk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-06T08:14:18.251Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Introduction: markets in modernization: transformations in urban market space and practice, c. 1800 – c. 1970

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2015

JON STOBART
Affiliation:
Department of History, Manchester Metropolitan University, All Saints Building, All Saints, Manchester, M15 6BH, UK
ILJA VAN DAMME
Affiliation:
Department of History, University of Antwerp, Stadscampus, Grote Kauwenberg 18, 2000 Antwerpen, Belgium

Extract

This special issue addresses the changing role and later history of physical, face-to-face markets for goods, which in modern cities all over the world are mainly or wholly used by individuals and families for consumption purposes. Our focus is on the urban market as a specific urban place and its shifting relationship with important alterations in the governance, society and economy of modern, industrial cities (until c. 1970). The main intention of this collection is to move beyond traditional (western) views of the so-called ‘decline’ of these urban marketplaces. In the history and theorization of the type of cities that came into being all over the world in the wake of economic and political transformations in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, ‘markets’ are usually thought of in terms of their institutional meaning. They are referred to as abstract notions of commerce and exchange, be it in commodities, labour, cash or shares. Seldom are they studied as real, physical marketplaces within cities; as entities that take up space; function in changing production and distribution chains and evolve as a result of changes in wholesaling, retailing, consumption and the political regulation of urban space, society and economy. Indeed, it is often argued that ‘marketplaces’ in this spatially delimited and concrete sense ceased to be of importance once modernization took hold of urban landscapes all over the world. That this is not the case is amply demonstrated by the articles gathered here: markets continued to be vibrant parts of a wide variety of towns and cities across the globe.

Type
Introduction
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 For classic overviews, see Pirenne, H., Medieval Cities: Their Origins and the Revival of Trade (Princeton, 1952Google Scholar; orig. edn 1925); Pirenne, H., The Economy of Cities (Harmondsworth, 1972Google Scholar; orig. edn 1969); Braudel, F., Civilisation matérielle, economie et capitalisme, vol. II: Les jeux de l’échange (Paris, 1979)Google Scholar; Bairoch, P., Cities and Economic Development: From the Dawn of History to the Present (London, 1988)Google Scholar.

2 Recent contributions are found in Calabi, D. and Christensen, S.T. (eds.), Cities and Cultural Exchange in Europe, 1400–1700 (Cambridge, 2007)Google Scholar.

3 For instance Stabel, P., ‘The city is the market, the market is the city. Retail and urban space in late medieval Bruges’, in Blondé, B., Stabel, P., Stobart, J. and Van Damme, I. (eds.), Buyers and Sellers. Retail Circuits and Practices in Medieval and Early Modern Europe (Turnhout, 2006), 79108CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Boone, M. and Howell, M. (eds.), In But Not of the Market: Movable Goods in the Late Medieval and Early Modern Economy (Brussels, 2007)Google ScholarPubMed.

4 See Calabi, D., The Market and the City: Square, Street and Architecture in Early Modern Europe (Aldershot, 2004)Google Scholar; and Welch, E., Shopping in the Renaissance: Consumer Cultures in Italy, 1400–1600 (New Haven, 2009)Google Scholar.

5 This historiographical bias is all too apparent in writings on nineteenth-century retailing such as Rappaport, E., Shopping for Pleasure. Women in the Making of London's West End (Princeton, 2000)Google Scholar; and Crossick, G. and Jaumain, S. (eds.), Cathedrals of Consumption: The European Department Store, 1850–1939 (Aldershot, 1999)Google Scholar.

6 Dennis, R., Cities in Modernity. Representations and Productions of Metropolitan Space, 1840–1930 (Cambridge, 2008)Google Scholar.

7 First published as Weber, M., ‘Die Stadt: eine soziologische Untersuchung’, Archiv für Sozialwissenschaft und Sozialpolitik, 47 (1920–21), 621772Google Scholar. We make references to the English translation published in Weber, M., Economy and Society. An Outline of Interpretive Sociology, ed. Roth, G. and Wittich, C. (Berkeley, 1978), 1212–372Google Scholar.

8 Ibid., 1213.

9 Ibid., 1214. Weber does not go so far as to claim that the marketplace is the only element of urbanity, giving, for instance, attention to the ‘fort’ as political centre, being equally crucial to medieval urban development. In many ways, the regulations enforced by the ‘fort’ were ways of countering urban market failures from food shortages to health issues. See, for instance, Beresford, M.W., New Towns of the Middle Ages: Town Plantation in England, Wales and Gascony (London, 1967)Google Scholar, and, more recently, Blockmans, W., Metropolen aan de Noordzee. Geschiedenis van Nederland, 1100–1555 (Amsterdam, 2010)Google Scholar, on strategies of urban promotion by feudal superiors in order to create marketplaces, almost invariably as sources of income.

10 Weber, Economy and Society, 1224.

11 Zubaida, S., ‘Weber and the Islamic city’, Max Weber Studies, 6 (2006), 111118CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 111.

12 Liverani, M., ‘Power and citizenship’, in Clark, P. (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Cities in World History (Oxford, 2013), 164Google Scholar–80, at 164–7.

13 Jansen, H.S.J., ‘Wrestling with the angel: on problems of definition in urban historiography’, Urban History, 23 (1996), 277CrossRefGoogle Scholar–99, at 284–5.

14 On perceptions of the city in western thinking, see Schorske, C., ‘The idea of the city in European thought – Voltaire to Spengler’, in Handlin, O. and Burchard, J. (eds.), The Historian and the City (Cambridge, 1963), 95114Google Scholar; and, more recent, Lees, A., Cities Perceived: Urban Society in European and American Thought, 1820–1940 (Manchester, 1985)Google Scholar.

15 Gottdiener, M. and Hutchison, R., The New Urban Sociology, 3rd edn (Colorado, 2006), 43Google Scholar–6. More extensively on sociological thinking about the city, see Saunders, P., Social Theory and the Urban Question (London, 1981)Google Scholar; and idem, ‘Space, the city and urban sociology’, in D. Gregory and J. Urry (eds.), Social Relations and Spatial Structures (London, 1985), 67–89.

16 P.J. Corfield, ‘Cities in time’, in Clark (ed.), Cities in World History, 828–46, at 833.

17 Lees, A., ‘Berlin and modern urbanity in German discourse, 1845–1945’, Journal of Urban History, 17 (1991), 153CrossRefGoogle Scholar–80.

18 Simmel's essay was first published in 1903; our references are drawn from the English translation in Bridge, G. and Watson, S. (eds.), The Blackwell City Reader (Oxford and Malden, 2002), 1119Google Scholar, quote from 12. On the centrality of the Berlin experience in the thinking of Simmel, see Jazbinsek, D., ‘The metropolis and the mental life of George Simmel: on the history of an antipathy’, Journal of Urban History, 30 (2003), 102CrossRefGoogle Scholar–25.

19 See also Bevir, M. and Trentmann, F., Markets in Historical Contexts: Ideas and Politics in the Modern World (Cambridge, 2004)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

20 Bridge and Watson (eds.), Blackwell City Reader, 12.

21 Ibid., 11 and 14.

22 Such a sensory approach to the history and sociology of cities has recently gained renewed interest, as is evidenced by Diaconu, M.et al. (eds.), Senses and the City: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Urban Sensescapes (Münster, 2011)Google Scholar; and the recent 2013 CHORD conference ‘Retailing and the senses: historical perspectives’ (see http://home.wlv.ac.uk/~in6086/2013conf.htm).

23 Park, R.E., Burgess, E.W. and McKenzie, R.D., The City (Chicago, 1925)Google ScholarPubMed. A nice analysis of their urban framework is provided by Savage, M. and Warde, A., Urban Sociology, Capitalism and Modernity (Basingstoke, 1993), 918CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

24 Christaller, W., Central Places in Southern Germany (Englewood Cliffs, 1966Google Scholar; orig. edn 1933).

25 Howard, E., Garden Cities of Tomorrow (London, 1902)Google Scholar, 22 (see also 26 and 76–7).

26 See Shaw, G., ‘The study of retail development’, in Benson, J. and Shaw, G. (eds.), The Evolution of Retail Systems, c. 1800–1914 (London, 1992), 114Google Scholar; and Alexander, N. and Akehurst, G., ‘The emergence of modern retailing, 1750–1950’, Business History, 40 (1998), 115CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

27 Howard, Garden Cities of Tomorrow, 23, 76.

28 These associations frequently pop up in remarks on the persistence of second-hand markets in the modernizing townscape. See Charpy, M., ‘The scope and structure of the nineteenth-century second-hand trade in the Parisian clothes market, in Fontaine, L. (ed.), Alternative Exchange. Second-Hand Circulations from the Sixteenth Century to the Present (New York, 2008), 127Google Scholar–51; and Stobart, J. and Van Damme, I., ‘Modernity and the second-hand trade: themes, topics and debates’, in idem (eds.), Modernity and the Second-Hand Trade. European Consumption Cultures and Practices, 1700–1900 (London, 2010), 115Google Scholar.

29 See Black, I.S., ‘Spaces of capital: bank office building in the City of London, 1830–1870’, Journal of Historical Geography, 26 (2000), 351CrossRefGoogle Scholar–75; Morrison, K., English Shops and Shopping (New Haven, 2003), 251Google Scholar–61.

30 This is our own translation. See Sitte, C., L'art de batir les villes. Notes et reflexions d'un architecte. Traduites et completees par Camille Matin (Geneva and Paris, 1902Google Scholar; orig. edn 1889), 7 (see also 16, and 135–7).

31 Joyce, P., The Rule of Freedom. Liberalism and the Modern City (London, 2003)Google Scholar.

32 Daly, C., L'architecture privée au XIXe siecle sous Napoleon III. Nouvelles maisons de Paris et ses environs (Paris, 1864), 57Google Scholar.

33 See, for example, Stobart, J., ‘Building an urban identity. Cultural space and civic boosterism in a “new” industrial town: Burslem, 1761–1911’, Social History, 29 (2004), 485CrossRefGoogle Scholar–98.

34 This metaphor for the historical city was used in the widely read and pessimistic account of modern life: Spengler, O., The Decline of the West. Perspectives of World History (London, 1928Google Scholar; orig. edn 1922), 89–110. See also Hebbert, M., ‘The vision of the European city’, Tiedepolitikka, 30 (2005), 2734Google Scholar.

35 Buls, C., Esthétique des villes (Brussels, 1893), 20Google Scholar. For an English translation, see www.library.cornell.edu/Reps/DOCS/buls.htm (Municipal Affairs, 3 (Dec. 1899), 732–41).

36 This is apparent in the works of such diverse thinkers as Walter Benjamin (Passagenwerk/The Arcades Project, 1927–940), Jürgen Habermas (Strukturwandel der Öffentlichkeit/The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere, 1962), Michel Foucault (Surveiller et Punier/Discipline and Punish, 1972) and, most recently, Richard Sennett (The Fall of Public Man, 1977).

37 See, for example, Tangires, H., Public Markets and Civic Culture in Nineteenth-Century America (Baltimore, 2003)Google Scholar.

38 Guàrdia, M. and Oyón, J.L. eds., Fer ciutat a través dels mercats Europa, segles XIX i XX (Barcelona, 2010)Google Scholar.

39 de Certeau, M., The Practice of Everyday Life (London, 1984)Google Scholar; Trentmann, F., ‘The politics of everyday life’, in idem (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the History of Consumption (Oxford, 2012), 521CrossRefGoogle Scholar–47.

40 Miller, D., A Theory of Shopping (Ithaca, 1998)Google Scholar; idem, Shopping, Place and Identity (London and New York, 1998); and idem, The Dialectics of Shopping (Chicago, 2001).

41 See, among others, Chakrabarty, D., Provincializing Europe. Postcolonial Thought and Historical Difference (Princeton, 2000)Google Scholar; Kocka, J., ‘Comparison and beyond’, History and Theory, 42 (2003)CrossRefGoogle Scholar, 39–44; Cohen, D. and O'Connor, M. (eds.), Comparison and History (New York, 2004)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Siegel, M., ‘Beyond compare: comparative method after the transnational turn’, Radical History Review, 91 (2005), 6291CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Haupt, H.-G., ‘Comparative history. A contested method’, Historisk Tidskrift, 127 (2007), 697716Google Scholar.

42 Edenso, T. and Jayne, M. (eds.), Urban Theory beyond the West. A World of Cities (London, 2012), 1Google Scholar.