Neighbours and Rivals: An Eighteenth-Century Journey Between Paris and London
MERCIER, LOUIS-SEBASTIAN
$56.99
Temporarily out of stock
The first work of great French journalist Louis-Sébastien Mercier, this seminal work of travel writing remained unpublished for over 200 years.
Mercier first travelled to London, and began recording his impressions, in 1780. An exemplar of a new form of journalistic, reflective literature, he presented emotive representations of the city as collections of experiences, habits and personalities. And differently from Dickens’s London or Baudelaire’s Paris, with their contrasts of opulence and misery, Mercier describes a less familiar urban environment – more optimistic, perhaps even utopian. His version of London is, in fact, a projection of his philosophical imagination – not simply a rounded portrait but also a reflection of what he hoped Paris could become.
For this first publication in English, Laurent Turcot and Jonathan Conlin’s translation preserves the life and humour of Mercier’s text. It is illustrated with contemporary images, with an emphasis on Thomas Rowlandson and Gabriel-Jacques de Saint-Aubin, the first Parisian fl ur-artist.
AUTHORS:
Laurent Turcot is a professor of history at l’Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières, and specialises in the 16th to the 19th century, and in urban culture and leisure. Jonathan Conlin, a professor of modern history at the University of Southampton, specialises in modern British cultural history from the 18th century to the present, with a focus on urban history. His previous books include The Nation’s Mantelpiece (Pallas Athene), Evolution and the Victorians (Bloomsbury) and Civilisation (BFI). He has just completed histories of the National Gallery and the Metropolitan Museum, as well as an acclaimed biography of Calouste Gulbenkian.
113 colour illustrations
ISBN: 9781843682707
Author: MERCIER, LOUIS-SEBASTIAN
Format: Hardcover
Publication date: 01/06/2025
RRP: $56.99
Pages: 284
Dimension: 195mm X 135mm
Imprint: Pallas Athene