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Welcome to Crévilles.org

 

Thank you for your indulgence when you visit the Crévilles site: the site is still under construction and many of its components are still at the trial stage.

 

When the new documentation centre was created in 2005 following the merging of funds from the different laboratories within the Maison des Sciences de l'Homme de Tours, the question of transferring the documentary resources to an electronic format appeared essential.
 
An initial inventory of the documentary resources currently available via Internet revealed that they were so dispersed that it was extremeley complicated to carry out searches in the field of the social sciences, and even more so for urban studies. It was thus decided to create an electronic resource centre on towns: Crévilles.org.

The first objective of this project was thus to facilitate searches at the intersection of the social sciences and urban studies by bringing together access to the electronic documentary resources through an internet site which provides a whole range of search tools accessible to everyone via the web.
The second objective was to create an electronic library available via this site, using the resources of the MSH de Tours, in order to participate at our own level in the vast movement of buiding a universal digital library (and thus with free access for all), in collaboration with the large projects of this type, and through association with all institutions interested in this issue, both to provide content and to create new cooperative documentary projects.
The intellectual and ergonomic construction of this electronic resource centre in the form of a web-site takes place in several stages, with a gradual integration of the tools for facilitating documentary research and of the resources specific to the MSH de Tours.

Crévilles.org is produced by the Maison des Sciences de l'Homme de Tours, an inter-departmental unit (UMS 1835) of the CNRS and Tours University.

Crévilles.org is designed, developed and maintained by Pascal Garret, Stéphane Loret, Marie-Christine Lyaet, Thomas Lallier and Joanna Greenland under the management of Sylvette Denèfle, head of the MSH de Tours.

 

Crévilles.org is at your disposal. Don't hesitate to This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it your suggestions and comments.

 

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Lecal notices regarding the Crévilles.org site

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Design, production and content: © MSH de Tours



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This internet site is produced by the MSH de Tours

 

33, allée Ferdinand de Lesseps

 

37204 Tours Cedex 03



Publication Manager:

Mme Sylvette Denèfle, Head of the MSH de Tours.



Copyright:

The whole of this site is subject to French and international legislation regarding copyright and intellectual property. All rights of reproduction and distribution are reserved, including iconographic and photographic images.

Copying of all or part of this site on any support is strictly forbidden without the specific authorisation of the publication manager.

 


Right of access and correction:

Articles 38 to 43, Law 78-17 of 6 January 1978: "Any person whose name appears in this server can at any time request the removal or modication of the information concerning him/her by contacting the This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

of the site."

 

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Name : Crévilles.org
Maison des Sciences de l'Homme de Tours
Address: : 33, allée Ferdinand de Lesseps
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Phone : 02 47 36 14 82
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• Keeping the lid on : Urban eruptions and social control since the 19th century le 2010-07-30 Print
News - in Publications
crevilles
Editors
Susan Finding
Logie Barrow
François Poirier
Type
Book
Date
Jul 2010
Pages
199
Price
£34.99
couverture
Abstract from the publisher :
 
The contributors to this book have explored various aspects of urban imagination, so intimately related to a peculiar social environment. They are historians and geographers, linguists and cultural students. Their methodologies are very different, their sources poles apart. And yet, they address the same object of study, social and spatial segregation and urban eruptions, though severally defined: from epidemics to anarchist scares, urban uprisings to mental maps, or the reverberations of urban memories in song, novels and museums. Case studies consider the towns of Liverpool, London, Hull, New York, Salvador de Bahia, or more generally France and America. The networks created among intellectuals and labourers, anarchists and migrants, or the lack of communication between those who feel oppressed (rioters, strikers, anti-vaccination protesters) and those in control, are a further common denominator.

In a way, urban epidemics were the epitome of the repulsive character large cities possessed in the eyes even of their own inhabitants. If they were the receptacle of so many foreigners, and shady political characters, if they were the scenes of social and ethnic conflict, and violence, and promiscuity, and prostitution, and drunkenness, and pauperism, they were of necessity a festering sore which nothing could eradicate.

It is strange that something of this fear should linger on today—otherwise, how can one explain the lacunae in the official memory of museums?—despite the cultural efforts produced in the opposite direction, with Ackroyd's love for East-End London, with the revival of a Little Italy in every major American city, with the nostalgic folklorisation of past miseries in Salvador de Bahia and in popular song. What sense of belonging can be generated by an obliteration of the past, what dynamic local culture can spring from an absence, from a hole in collective memory? This book goes some way to filling those gaps.
 
Susan Finding is Professor in British Studies at Poitiers University since 1987.
 
Logie Barrow taught the social history of all more or less English-speaking countries outside North America at the University of Bremen from 1980 to 2008. He retired so as to spend more time researching history.
 
François Poirier (†2010) was Lecturer at Université Paris 8, before he was appointed to a professorship at neighbouring Université Paris 13 in 1993. He published extensively on issues related to British politics, English social history, and Franco-British interaction.
 

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