As ‘a City Of Quartiers’ ? Essay, Research Paper
Obviously, before answering such a question it is important to reach some definition of a quartier. Speaking to an englishman who had lived in Paris for a number of years threw some light on the issue. He loosely described a quartier as “an area with a common-thread running through it”. Although undoubtedly vague this definition does convey the flexibility of the quartier concept. A ‘common-thread’, in this sense, could refer to any uniting characteristic a population may exhibit, the interrelated functionality of business or even the concentration of particularly distinctive features. Lacking any specific limitations, it may also be used to describe quartiers with varying scales of resolution. In extreme cases, these could range from what would normally be considered micro- to macro-level proportions (in relation to the City of Paris as the area in question), though it is usual for its use to be somewhere in between the two. Additionally, any attempt to examine the structure of quartiers requires concepts of space to be intimately tied with concepts of time in what Massey (1994) describes as “space-time geography” (p2). The freezing of time and the ability to take a ’snapshot’ of a quartier is necessary to overcome the “palpable flux and fluidity [that is] metropolitain life and cosmopolitain movement” (Chambers, 1993, p188). In other words, quartiers may be seen as dynamic social constructs that consequently need to be viewed and studied in a moment. Possibly one of the most well known quartier’s in Paris (notwithstanding its name) is the Latin Quarter, in the fifth arrondissement and on the exclusive Left Bank of the city. Centred on the boulevards St-Michel and St-Germain this quartier corresponds with the flexible definition outlined above as a result of the high density of elite schools and universities in the area, which include: a host of grand ecoles, several universites and the Lycee Louis le Grand and Henri IV. In fact, the concentration is such that Russell (1983) noted, “There is nothing across the English Channel that corresponds to this quarter: it is as if Eton, Harrow, Oxford, Cambridge…the London School of Economics, and the Royal Institute of International Affairs were all bundled into an area less than a mile square” (p304). Similarly distinctive is the Jewish Quarter, focused since the twelfth century on the rue des Rosier in the Marais. Unlike the Latin Quarter however, it is distinctive because of the localised presence of a ‘foreign’ culture and the associated emergence of a network of social relations that have acted together and ’sealed’ the community spirit: not only is this area the home of a significant number of Jews, it is also an area of much Jewish work. Obviously, such a mutually-reinforcing dual-identity has strengthened this areas claim to be a quartier. However, just as this is possible, so too is the reverse. In the Beaux Quartiers of the sixteenth arrondissement (on the western periphery of Paris) a dichotomy exists between home and work that is the antithesis of the Jewish Quarter. This area is home to the aristocratic and rich of Paris but the majority workplace of the immigrant poor who service their homes, gardens and parks and attempt to sell shoddy goods to tourists
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