Publication
Title
Marketing the French Revolution? Revolutionary auction advertisements in comparative perspective (Paris, 1778–1793)
Author
Abstract
This article presents an exploratory study of the Parisian auction market, its transformation during the French Revolution and the relationship between economic policies and political ideologies, building further on existing research on consumerism in eighteenth-century France and the revolutionary art market. Surveying the advertisements for auction sales featured in the Parisian newspaper Affiches, Annonces et Avis Divers, this research first reconstructed the more general developments in the auction market. Secondly, it examines material culture and its social distribution during the Terror, comparing the figures with a pre-revolutionary year. Thirdly, the research investigated the consumer values that gave cultural and social meaning to the products and guided buyers in their consumption. This article’s findings reveal that the unprecedented diffusion of aristocratic luxuries on the auction market was supported by a stable advertising discourse of elite consumer values centred around aesthetics and high quality.
Language
English
Source (journal)
French history. - Oxford, 1987, currens
Publication
Oxford : 2022
ISSN
0269-1191 [print]
1477-4542 [online]
DOI
10.1093/FH/CRAB015
Volume/pages
36 :1 (2022) , p. 68-99
ISI
000812562100005
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
Full text (open access)
Full text (publisher's version - intranet only)
UAntwerpen
Faculty/Department
Research group
Project info
Fashioning 'old and new'. Secondary markets, commodity value conventions and the dawn of consumer societies in Western Europe (18th-19th centuries)
Publication type
Subject
Art 
Affiliation
Publications with a UAntwerp address
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 23.05.2021
Last edited 26.02.2025
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