Uproot  

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 +{| class="toccolours" style="float: left; margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 2em; font-size: 85%; background:#c6dbf7; color:black; width:30em; max-width: 40%;" cellspacing="5"
 +| style="text-align: left;" |
 +# To root up; to tear up by the roots, or as if by the roots; to [[extirpate]].
 +# To remove utterly; to [[eradicate]].
 +|}
{{Template}} {{Template}}
-:''[[creative destruction]], [[nineteenth century Paris]]''+:''[[creative destruction]]''
-The '''Haussmann Renovations''', or ''Haussmannization'', of [[Paris]] was a work commissioned by [[Napoléon III]] and led by [[Georges Eugène Haussmann|Baron Georges-Eugène Haussmann]], spanning from [[1852]] to [[1870]]. +
-The project encompassed all aspects of [[urban planning]], both in the center of Paris and in the surrounding districts: streets and boulevards, regulations imposed on facades of buildings, public parks, sewers and water works, city facilities and public monuments.+# To root up; to tear up by the roots, or as if by the roots; to [[extirpate]].
 +# To remove utterly; to [[eradicate]].
-The project was strongly criticized by some of its contemporaries, forgotten for a good part of the twentieth century, and then redeemed when post-war urban planning became discredited; however, it still has an influence on the everyday lives of Parisians. It established the foundation of what is today the popular representation of the French capital around the world, by changing the old Paris of dense and irregular medieval alleyways into a modern city with wide avenues and open spaces.+==Uprooted==
- +'''Uprooted''' may refer to:
-It also must be noted that the unsanitary quarters "cleaned" by Haussmann contained very few of the bourgeois class. Indeed, the parting of [[uprooting]] of established [[working class]] residential areas may have been another security measure, as a disrupted and scattered community will find it harder to unite and so will pose less of a threat. To modern ears this may sound odd, but the working classes were still known as "the dangerous classes" to Parisians, and the French in general, and the memories of the 1789 and 1848 revolutions where workers revolted against the state had left deep impressions on the Parisian psyche.+
- +
-So was established a sort of "zonage" that still dominates the distribution of housing and activities in Paris and its nearest suburbs: from the centre to the west, offices and bourgeois quarters; from the east and outer rim, poorer housing and industry.+
- +
-It should also be noted that when reports of the outbreak of the [[Paris Commune]] insurrection reached Haussmann he expressed his frustration at not having been able to carry out his reforms quickly enough to make such an insurrection futile. +
-== Critics of Napoleon III's urban politics ==+
-Artists and architects ([[Charles Garnier]]) deplored the suffocating monotony of monumental architecture. Politicians and writers accused the spread of speculation and corruption ([[Émile Zola]]'s '' "[[La Curée]]" '') and a few wrongly accused Haussmann of personal enrichment. Many of the criticisms targeted the base motivations of the venture and ended by felling the ''préfet''.+
- +
-===Widening of streets: a tool for an authoritarian regime?===+
- +
-Many of Napoléon III's contemporaries accused him of hiding, under the guise of improving social and sanitary conditions, a project geared toward more effective military policing of the capital. Under this theory the wide thoroughfares were constructed to facilitate troop movement and prevent easy blocking of streets with barricades, and their straightness allowed artillery to fire on rioting crowds and their barricades. This interpretation has been widely repeated and accepted, notably in [[Lewis Mumford]]'s writings. +
- +
-The extent of the work itself shows that Napoleon III's aims were, at least, not ''solely'' security-oriented in nature. Beyond the spectacular piercing of the main boulevards, city transformations also included the construction of a modern underground network of sewers and freshwater, the installation of an efficient building plan on the surface, and the harmonisation of the [[architecture]] along the new avenues. +
- +
-Yet it is true that Napoleon III was concerned with maintaining strict order. Haussmann never hesitated to explain that his street plan would ease the maintenance of public order when presenting his projects to the [[Conseil de Paris]] or local landowners. It should also be noted that when reports of the outbreak of the Paris Commune insurrection reached Haussmann he expressed his frustration at not having been able to carry out his reforms quickly enough to make such an insurrection futile. The [[strategic]] dimension is thus indeed present, but it is but one element among others; it is perhaps most important where there was question of joining Paris' main ''casernes'' between them.+
- +
-It should also be mentioned that the police were not one of Haussmann's responsibilities. His mandate actually reduced the position of [[préfet de police]], as it removed from this office problems such as city hygiene and the lighting and cleaning of its streets.+
- +
-===Social rupture===+
-Many contemporary observers denounced the demographic and social effects of Haussmann's urbanism operations.+
- +
-Louis Lazare, author, under [[Haussmann]]'s predecessor [[Rambuteau]], of an important "dictionary of Paris streets", considered in 1861 in the journal ''Revue municipale'' that Haussmann's works disproportionately increased State-dependent populations in attracting masses of poor to Paris. In reality, in certain respects Haussmann himself slowed the progress of his renovations in order to avoid a massive flood of workers to the Capital.+
- +
-On the other hand, critics denounced as early as 1850 the effect that the renovations would have on the social composition of Paris. In a slightly oversimplified way, they painted a portrait of the pre-Haussmannian building as a synthesis of the Parisian social hierarchy: the bourgeoisie on the second floor, civil servants and employees on the third and fourth, low-wage employees on the fifth, house staff, students and the poor under the eaves. Thus one building was shown to represent and house all social classes. This cohabitation, of course varying from quarter to quarter, disappeared in its majority after the completion of Haussmann's work. This had two effects on the dispersion of dwellings in Paris:+
-* The city-centre renovations provoked a rise in rents, and this forced poorer families towards Paris' outer arrondissements. This we can see in population statistics:+
- +
-{| align="center" cellpadding="3" style="border:1px solid #888888;"+
-|- style="background-color:#bbbbbb;"+
-!Arrondissement!!1861!!1866!!1872+
-|-+
-|1er||89,519||81,665||74,286+
-|-{{ligne grise}}+
-|6e||95,931||99,115||90,288+
-|-+
-|17e||75,288||93,193||101,804+
-|-{{ligne grise}}+
-|20e||70,060||87,844||92,712+
-|}+
-*Certain urbanism decisions contributed to a social imbalance between the Paris' west, wealthy, and its east, underprivileged. Therefore no eastern neighborhood in Paris benefited from renovations comparable to the large avenues surrounding the [[place de l'Étoile]] in the XVIe and XVIIe arrondissements. The poor were concentrated in arrondissements left aside by the city renovations.+* [[Uprooted (Absent Element album)|''Uprooted'' (Absent Element album)]], 2005
 +* [[Uprooted (The Antlers album)|''Uprooted'' (The Antlers album)]], 2006
 +* [[Uprooted (The Rankin Family album)|''Uprooted'' (The Rankin Family album)]], 1998
 +* [[Uprooted (novel)|''Uprooted'' (novel)]], a 2015 fantasy novel written by Naomi Novik
 +* ''[[The Uprooted]]'', a 1952 book about European migrations into the United States by Oscar Handlin
-As an answer to this, Haussmann presented the complex creation of the [[bois de Vincennes]] forest-parklands that would give working populations a promenade comparable to the [[bois de Boulogne]]. It also must be noted that the unsanitary quarters "cleaned" by Haussmann contained very few of the bourgeois class. Indeed, the parting of uprooting of established working-class residential areas may have been another security measure, as a disrupted and scattered community will find it harder to unite and so will pose less of a threat. To the modern ears this may sound odd, but the working-class people were still known as "the dangerous classes" to Parisians, and the French in general, and the memories of the 1789 and 1848 revolutions, where workers revolted against the state, had left deep impressions on the Parisian psyche. 
-That way, a sort of "zonage" was established that still dominates the distribution of housing and activities in Paris and its nearest suburbs: from the centre to the west, offices and wealthy neighborhoods; from the east and outer rim, poorer housing and industry.+{{GFDL}}
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}

Revision as of 20:47, 6 January 2020

  1. To root up; to tear up by the roots, or as if by the roots; to extirpate.
  2. To remove utterly; to eradicate.

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creative destruction
  1. To root up; to tear up by the roots, or as if by the roots; to extirpate.
  2. To remove utterly; to eradicate.

Uprooted

Uprooted may refer to:





Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Uproot" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.





Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Uproot" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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