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Robert Darnton An Early Information Society
Online Discussion Archive:
Topic and Reply 2
Topic: Media Systems and Desacralization
Conf: Discussion of Darnton's Article
From: Brad Brown bb@hilltop.bradley.edu
Date: Thursday, March 16, 2000 08:16 PM
As interested as I am to hear others comment on the place of Africa in
the French political imagination during the eighteenth century, I
would like to prompt further discussion about this article's
contributions to the historiography on communication networks and the
desacralization of the monarchy.
A long-time admirer of Professor Darnton's work, I took pains to
attend his talk at the AHA conference and was pleased to hear him
press the analysis set out in his recent books further back in time
and to hear about other sources beyond _libelles_. That said, I find
the article's reticence about some of the historiography it quite
evidently confronts somewhat curious.
Speaking personally, the alternative presented here to public-sphere
analysis by an emphasis on "media systems" (is this the right term?)
seems a welcome change. Still I would have liked to hear more about
the implications of this substitution, and perhaps others can step
forward to suggest how they see this as opening up more room for
analysis of change in the eighteenth century. And yet, there is a
whole body of literature that has adopted the language of "public
spheres" and simultaneously tackles similar evidence. While there are
no doubt other works to mention here, the studies of Arlette Farge
seem especially apposite. In particular, given the attention to
discourse about the king, the article left me wondering about how the
author might reinterpret the material in _Subversive Words_ (1994)in a
direction that would be less concerned with revealing and periodizing
the establishment of a public sphere than it would be with rethinking
the relations between different media and social institutions. Or, do
feedback loops preclude this sort of question in favor of other sorts
of questions? What does Gabriel Tarde provide that Jurgen Habermas
does not?
Silence about Farge's study of the expression of attitudes toward the
king also seems important here, since her work directly addresses the
issue of the desacralization of the monarchy over the same period as
the article, including attention to some of the same events. The
difference between Farge and Darnton seems to be that even while
gesturing to the fitfulness of desacralization, this article reads the
process as a more straightforward development of disillusionment with
Louis XV's failings than the ironic consequence of obsessive interest
with the spectacle of the king. At issue in this difference is perhaps
a debate about how far we should see eighteenth-century political
rhetoric in the light of modern attitudes toward politics. Again, I
would like to see a more open statement about these implicit
disagreements. And there is room, too, for statements of agreement,
as, for example, in the similarities of analysis of the case of Mlle.
Bonafon between this article and the careful research of Lisa Jane
Graham (see "Crimes of Opinion" in Jack R. Censer, et al.,
eds.,_Visions and Revisions of Eighteenth-Century France_, 1997).
For what it is worth, my own take on the desacralization
historiography--spelled out in my recent dissertation (Bradford C.
Brown, "Kingship and the French Revolution of 1830: The Meaning of
Royal Authority in Popular Political Culture and Orl³anism,"
University of California, Santa Barbara, 1999)--is that too much has
been made of (1) the evidence of attacks on the king at the expense of
evidence of belief in the values of popular monarchism, and of (2) the
particular crises of the reign of Louis XV at the cost of a longer
view of the ups and downs of support for the monarchy.
Clearly, no article can be expected to discuss all the relevant
literature, and least of all one that originated as a lecture. So I
hope these comments seem, as they are intended, less like complaints
than provocations for further discussion.
I want to take this opportunity, too, to thank Professor Darnton and
commend the AHR and all of those who worked on this project for
posting this article and creating the useful web sites that surround
it.
Brad Brown
Bradley University
Topic: Re: Media Systems and Desacralization
Conf: Discussion of Darnton's Article
From: Robert Darnton darnton@princeton.edu
Date: Tuesday, March 28, 2000 02:18 PM
Brad Brown invites me to situate my interpretation in relation to
those of Arlette Farge and Lisa Graham and to be more explicit in my
objection to aspects of Habermas's thesis. Arlette Farge, Lisa Graham,
and I have often crossed paths, both personally and in following one
another through boxes of manuscript in the Biblioth²que de l'Arsenal.
I don't believe we have any fundamental disagreements. Once, I set out
to write a book very similar to _Dire et mal dire_; then, after
Arlette Farge's book appeared, I found that she had covered the
subject so well that I abandoned the project. I especially sympathize
with her contention that ordinary people had opinions about public
events and that they participated in the formulation of public
opinion, even though Habermas excluded them from the public sphere of
the eighteenth century. He identified the public sphere with
rationality and the bourgeoisie, but he did so in the course of an
abstract dissertation written thirty-eight years ago without recourse
to primary sources in French.
To historians who have worked in Parisian archives, ordinary
people--workers and artisans as well as lawyers and merchants--appear
everywhere, talking about everything, including affairs of state. The
autobiography of Jacques-Louis M³n³tra edited by Daniel Roche provides
the supreme example of a streetwise and politically informed working
artisan. My own forays into the archives differ from those of Farge
and Roche only in that I have set myself a different goal. I am trying
to understand the process of communication and to reconstruct circuits
of information rather than to understand daily life and street
culture. By their very nature, however, our subjects overlap. I don't
believe that Arlette Farge would dissent from my argument about the
way songs moved across the social hierarchy, from the bottom up as
well as the top down.
I doubt that Lisa Graham would disagree, either, although I have not
yet read her book about Mlle. Bonafon and similar cases, which will be
published this spring. From conversations with her and a reading of
her "Crimes of Opinion," I gather that she finds less sedition than
does Arlette Farge in the loose talk about Louis XV and his ministers
and mistresses. I think she is right to emphasize the popular
mythology that supported the monarchy and to warn us against a
tendency to see the French Revolution around the corner every time the
police locked up an irreverent gossip in the Bastille. In a lecture on
the Bonafon case, which I gave at the New York Public Library two
years ago, and in my study of songs, which can be read as a hyperlink
to "An Early Information Age," I stressed that much of the gossip and
singing offended the authorities not because it was revolutionary but
because it had repercussions in an old-fashioned variety of court
politics. Yet I agree with the testimony of the marquis d'Argenson,
who stressed that a profound discontent with the monarchy was
spreading through the Parisian public--the common people as well as
the sophisticated elite--during the mid-century years. I must admit,
therefore, that I want to have it both ways. I think the fall of the
Maurepas ministry in 1749 expressed two kinds of phenomena: court
politics as a power game that had been played since the early
Renaissance and public opinion as a force that was beginning to turn
decisively against the Bourbon monarchy.
Although I have more sympathy with Habermas's political views than
with Tarde's, I think Tarde offers a useful corrective to Habermas's
notion of the bourgeois public sphere. As I understand it, Habermas's
thesis provides a heuristic point of entry to the study of caf³s,
salons, provincial academies, masonic lodges, and journalism. But
historians who have actually completed research on these
subjects--first-rate scholars like Daniel Roche, Pierre R³tat, and
Benedetta Craveri in addition to Arlette Farge and Lisa Graham--have
not found the egalitarian world of rational discourse imagined by
Habermas. Instead, they have discovered complex cultural codes laced
with social distinctions, privileges, patronage, clientelism, and
influence peddling linked to the power system. It may be that Habermas
developed his concept of communication in the eighteenth century as an
ideal type, which he could put to use in criticizing the mass media of
the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. If so, how does it help us
understand the flow of information and the nature of public opinion
under the Old Regime, and how does it compare with the ideas of
Gabriel Tarde?
Habermas seems to have derived his views of eighteenth-century France
from thinkers such as Condorcet, who believed that communication
through the printed word would make rationality triumph, all readers
being equal when confronted with texts in the silence of their
studies. Tarde, by contrast, allows for social complexities inherent
in the practices of reading, especially the reading of newspapers,
which he relates to public discussions in caf³s. He argues that in
nineteenth-century Paris, newspapers provided a menu for the day's
caf³ talk. The talk, as a digest of commentary and news, then fed back
into subsequent newspapers, so that reading and discussing belonged to
a dialectical process, which ultimately shaped public opinion. Since
the same texts arrived at the same time everywhere in the caf³s,
readers were conscious of participating in a collective act of
assimilating and interpreting news, even when they disagreed about its
implications. By stressing the collective and dialectical aspects of
this process, Tarde does justice both to the interactive quality of
communication and to the interplay between oral and print culture.
Tarde's insights apply best to the nineteenth century, but I have
found them helpful in studying archives from the 1740s, where
references to talk and print often appear side by side in the same
document. Here, for example, is how the law student, Franois Bonis,
acquired the text of one of the songs in the Affair of the Fourteen,
according to his interrogation in the Bastille: "While visiting the
abb³ Gisson in the Hªtel Dieu about three weeks ago at four in the
afternoon, he saw a priest--a man of about thirty-five, above average
in height--also arrive on a visit to the said Gisson. The conversation
turned to the subject matter of the gazettes; and this priest, saying
that someone had been so malicious as to make some satirical verse
about the king, took out a sheet of verse against His Majesty from
which the respondent made a copy." The spoken, the written, and the
printed word all reinforced each other in this little scene, which
illustrates a communication process quite different in character from
the rational discourse imagined by Habermas.
If taken as heuristic tools, Tarde's concepts may sharpen the
researcher's perceptions, while the voguish theories of Habermas may
get in their way. A researcher who sets out to discover the public
sphere is likely to find it wherever he or she looks and then perhaps
to reify it--that is, to construe it as a force at work in history, an
active agent which produces palpable effects, possibly even the French
Revolution. Of course, Habermas himself cannot be blamed for this
misuse of his ideas. Much of it derives from mistranslation; for his
concept of "Éffentlichkeit" has been rendered in French as "sph²re
publique." French historians have attributed agency to this "space"
and made it the crucial factor, more important than ideas or public
opinion, in the collapse of the Old Regime. In fact, spatial metaphors
have proliferated so much in historical writing that they are choking
out other modes of analysis. I think the mode of Habermas has outlived
its usefulness. And if Tarde's approach seems unpersuasive, I would
argue for a return to Tocqueville, where questions of ideology,
intellectuals, and public opinion were given their earliest and most
incisive treatment.
Robert Darnton
Princeton University
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