ABSTRACT

This book takes a novel, data-driven approach to the cemeteries of Paris, analyzing a largely text-based body of archival material as proxy evidence for visual material that has been lost due to systematic, and legally sanctioned, acts of erasure.

This study represents the first full-length study of vernacular monuments in France and the entrepreneurs who made them. It also provides methodical considerations, at the intersection of the computational and digital humanities for managing survival biases in extant historical evidence, that are applicable beyond the thematic focus of this book. Since extant examples of these more inconspicuous monuments are rare, this project employs both distant and close viewing—analyzing commercial almanacs, work logs, and burial records in aggregates alongside detailed case studies—to compensate for gaps in the material record.

The book will be of interest to scholars working in visual culture, popular culture, digital humanities, and French history.

chapter |22 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|32 pages

After 23 Prairial

Negotiating the Social and Urban Consequences of Cemetery Reform after 1804

chapter 2|27 pages

Marbriers de Paris

The Stonecutting Profession and Its Reputation as a Funerary Profession

chapter 4|38 pages

Toward a Visual Culture of Permanence

chapter |11 pages

Epilogue

Société Le Roy Bouillon