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    <front>
        <journal-meta>
            <journal-id>TMR</journal-id>
            <journal-title-group>
                <journal-title>The Medieval Review</journal-title>
            </journal-title-group>
            <issn pub-type="epub">1096-746X</issn>
            <publisher>
                <publisher-name>Indiana University</publisher-name>
            </publisher>
        </journal-meta>
        <article-meta>
            <article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">24.12.03</article-id>
            <title-group>
                <article-title>24.12.03, Giraudet, Public Opinion and Political Contest in Late Medieval Paris</article-title>
            </title-group>
            <contrib-group>
                <contrib contrib-type="author">
                    <name>
                        <surname>Emily Hutchison</surname>
                        <given-names/>
                    </name>
                    <aff>       Mount Royal University
                    </aff>
                    <address>
                        <email>ehutchison@mtroyal.ca</email>
                    </address>
                </contrib>
            </contrib-group>
            <pub-date publication-format="epub" date-type="pub" iso-8601-date="2022">
                <year>2024</year>
            </pub-date>
            <product product-type="book">
                <person-group>
                    <name>
                        <surname>Giraudet, Luke</surname>
                        <given-names/>
                    </name>
                </person-group>
                <source>Public Opinion and Political Contest in Late Medieval Paris: The Parisian
                    Bourgeois and his Community, 1400-50</source>
                <series>Studies in European Urban History (1100-1800)</series>
                <year iso-8601-date="2023">2023</year>
                <publisher-loc>Turnhout</publisher-loc>
                <publisher-name>Brepols</publisher-name>
                <page-range>Pp. 328</page-range>
                <price>€104.00 (hardback)</price>
                <isbn>978-2-503-59386-9</isbn>
            </product>
            <permissions>
                <copyright-statement>Copyright 2024 Trustees of Indiana University. Indiana University provides the information contained in this file for non-commercial, personal, or research use only. All other use, including but not limited to commercial or scholarly reproductions, redistribution, publication or transmission, whether by electronic means or otherwise, without prior written permission of the copyright holder is strictly prohibited.</copyright-statement>
            </permissions>
        </article-meta>
    </front>
    <body>
        <p>Luke Giraudet’s <italic>Public Opinion and Political Contest in Late Medieval
                Paris</italic> is the product of the author’s 2019 doctoral dissertation at the
            University of York. It is an ambitious study that offers meaningful contributions to
            several overlapping historiographies, most notably the histories of late medieval French
            politics, medieval urban studies, premodern communication, and the history of public
            opinion alongside the “public sphere.” The book is framed around a close examination of
            the anonymous <italic>Journal d’un Bourgeois de Paris</italic>, a text that narrates
            five decades of political turmoil in Paris: the Armagnac-Burgundian civil war
            (1411-1435), the English occupation of Paris (1422-1436), and the Valois’s reclamation
            of the capital city (1436). However, the historical value of the
                <italic>Journal</italic> has largely been minimized due to its overt partiality
            toward the Burgundian faction from the text’s opening in 1405 to its end in 1449. In
                <italic>L’opinion publique à la fin du Moyen Âge</italic> (2002), eminent historian
            Bernard Guenée dismissed the <italic>Journal</italic>’s utility as a credible gauge of
            public opinion in Paris because of its author’s loyalty to the Burgundian party.
            Consequently, the source has only been applied to historical analyses of the period with
            significant hesitation, leading to its “awkward isolation in current histories of
            fifteenth-century Paris” (275). One of Giraudet’s main objectives is to challenge this
            deeply rooted, negative perception. </p>
        <p> </p>
        <p>The greatest strength of Giraudet’s book is that he succeeds in this task, thereby making
            an important intervention in the historiography of fifteenth-century French and Parisian
            political history. He argues successfully that the Bourgeois’s membership within several
            overlapping Parisian communities made him a direct witness to the political actions and
            reactions, the conflicts, and the perspectives of Parisians. Furthermore, in addition to
            counterbalancing the more “neutral” <italic>Chronique du Religieux</italic> that Guenée
            relied on for his examination of public opinion, the <italic>Journal</italic> is a
            unique contemporary text that offers rare insights into the finer details of everyday
            Parisian life (18). Most importantly for Giraudet’s purpose, it reports on the “ongoing
            debates concerning the common good, taxation, warfare, and the city’s own place in the
            kingdom,” debates, he suggests, that occupied the attention of the bulk of Parisians
            during the fifteenth century (275). And, while he admits that the communities to which
            the Bourgeois belonged represent merely “a subsection of Parisian society,” Giraudet
            proposes that <italic>Journal</italic> is nonetheless “integral to envisioning the late
            medieval Parisian public sphere” (275). </p>
        <p> </p>
        <p>The concept of the “public sphere” is a critical thread throughout the book, through
            which Giraudet directly challenges Jürgen Habermas’s model. According to Habermas, the
            emotionality of medieval people prevented them from engaging rationally in political
            discourse, and due to widespread illiteracy and the absence of “institutionalized public
            spaces such as urban coffeehouses and salons” (42), a medieval public sphere never
            emerged. Giraudet persuasively counters this derisive assessment by demonstrating the
            “permanence of political critique and discussion” in Paris. Building on an international
            historiography relating to medieval popular politics, Giraudet notes that what
            differentiated the medieval from the modern was that it was dynamic and untethered to
            formal institutionalized places. For example, in chapter 1 he demonstrates how important
            a heterogenous place like the Saints-Innocents church and graveyard in the Halles
                <italic>quartier</italic> was for social and political exchanges. Chapter 4 examines
            the communicative function of urban space, and specifically, the squares and streets as
            loci for political engagement for both men and women. As explained already in chapter 2,
            spaces like these were crucial to the publication of “official” information or
            expressions of authority (sermons, executions) because ruling authorities understood
            that it was there where they would have the greatest impact. The political reactions,
            including the collective emotions Parisians <italic>rationally</italic> expressed
            therein (which he argues for in the last third of this chapter), illustrate how
            important these unofficial, urban spaces were for shoring up people’s willingness to
            participate in political dialogue. Medieval political communication was not simply a
            top-down process as Habermas claimed; it was, rather, a continuous dialogue between
            authorities and the citizens in a variety of milieu.</p>
        <p> </p>
        <p>Additionally, rumors-as-political-expression spread in these very locations (chapter 3),
            and, as examined in chapter 5, the civic ceremonies that unfolded in public places
            further acted as an “important interface” between official communication on the one
            hand, and popular opinion and rumor on the other. For Giraudet, these varied spaces
            simultaneously provided the framing for the former, and a material forum for Parisians’
            “wider participation in political discourse” (227). Hence, although the physical spaces
            in which the public sphere emerged were not static, formalized sites as were the
            coffeehouses and salons of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Paris, what becomes
            patently evident in this study is the profundity of engagement among [at least some]
            Parisians in the spaces that were, for them, important sites of political discussion,
            criticism, and political action. Political communication was not unidirectional as
            Habermas insisted, coming strictly from the kings or clerical elites; Parisians also
            “deployed political discourse to secure their stake in civic authority” (47).</p>
        <p> </p>
        <p>Another significant achievement of this study is that it analyzes the Bourgeois’s
            authorial intentions as he shaped his narrative. His <italic>Journal</italic> was not
            simply a narrative designed to mirror the actions or perspectives of his “opinion
            communities”--a term Giraudet uses throughout his book to identify the communities to
            which Bourgeois belonged and with whom his political perspectives aligned. Indeed, as
            Guenée and other scholars have shown, the <italic>Journal</italic> is an intrinsically
            partisan text. Giraudet uses the Bourgeois’s partiality as an opportunity to explore the
            way in which he constructed his text for a very specific audience: the overlapping
            communities to which he belonged, and, most importantly, his Right Bank connections.
            Chapter 1 lays the foundation for this ongoing thread. Giraudet provides extraordinary
            detail of the social and spatial context for the Bourgeois author, who he identifies as
            Nicolas Confrant, canon of Notre Dame Chapter, former theologian at the University of
            Paris, and priest at Saints-Innocents. It has long been hypothesized that
                the<italic>Journal</italic>’s author was connected to the Right Bank, and that he
            had a stake in the Burgundian stronghold around the Halles quarter. Giraudet’s
            meticulous prosopographical analysis, which he couples with spatial analysis and network
            theory, provides necessary precision to this line of thinking. In addition to more
            firmly grounding the Bourgeois’s identity and his connections to both the Halles quarter
            and the University of Paris, chapter 1 provides a much more detailed outline of his
            pro-Burgundian, mainly artisanal audience base on the Right Bank. </p>
        <p> </p>
        <p>By providing this comprehensive context to the Bourgeois author, Giraudet coincidentally
            establishes that the <italic>Journal </italic>codified “the institutional and collective
            memories” of that large, heterogenous, pro-Burgundian community on the Right Bank (52),
            and, that he “attempted to influence the political views, morals and social values of
            his audience while concurrently giving shape to this very community through his writing,
            demonstrating his function as an interpreter in the public sphere” (52). For these
            reasons, Giraudet construes the <italic>Journal</italic> as a “textual counterpart to
            the lived public sphere” (47), and, therefore, positions its author as its “interpreter”
            (52).</p>
        <p> </p>
        <p>The drawback of the level of detail we see in all chapters is that they are lengthy and
            very dense, at times leading readers down pathways that are extraneous to the point at
            hand. The lengthy discussion on the public/private spatial divide in chapter 4, which
            subsequently led to a discussion about the gendering of space followed by an examination
            of the “female publicity” in the<italic>Journal,</italic> was a confusing digression,
            and one in which the arguments failed to convince this reviewer. At other points in the
            book, there are sections that could have been substantially compressed and then
            incorporated into other parts of the chapter. For example, chapter 2’s section on
            emotions and communication could be woven throughout the chapter, where some of these
            examples would more directly bolster Giraudet’s claims regarding the reactions to (and
            engagement with) the official forms of communication. Similarly, in chapter 3, the
            section on <italic>fama</italic> and <italic>male fama</italic> could have been
            integrated into the other subsections without the need for a one of its own. </p>
        <p> </p>
        <p>In chapter 1, the author has incorrectly described the spatial footprint of the
            Saint-Martin <italic>quartier</italic> (53), leaving out the <italic>quartier
            </italic>Saint-Denis, which in fact forms a boundary between that of Saint-Martin and
            the Halles <italic>quartier</italic>. He has also overlooked in his description the
            Verrerie and Grève <italic>quartiers</italic>. Given that Giraudet rightly argues that
                <italic>quartiers</italic> were crucial for community-building, it is remiss to omit
            the boundary quarter of Saint-Denis, especially since Giraudet notes the importance of
            the Grande rue Saint-Denis in the <italic>Journal </italic>in passing (53).
            Unfortunately, he does not elaborate here or elsewhere, even though this boulevard was
            part of the <italic>Croisée</italic>, much wider than rue Saint-Martin, and the primary
            street for traffic inside and outside the city on the Right Bank. Furthermore, later in
            the chapter he introduces some festivities at the Church of Saint-Leu-Saint-Giles (62),
            which he argues provides further evidence of the Bourgeois’s connection to the two
            aforementioned districts (Halles and Saint-Martin). However, this church was located
            within the Saint-Denis <italic>quartier</italic>. </p>
        <p> </p>
        <p>More clarification in some of the notes would have strengthened some of the claims. For
            example, Giraudet argues that local concerns may have been behind the Bourgeois’s
            attention to the conspiracy of 1416. The evidence was that several individuals owned
            houses “along the rues Saint-Martin and Saint-Denis” (64). However only two of the
            streets identified in the note (n. 66) are connected to rue Saint-Denis (rues des
            Lombards and Chanverie), and none are connected to Saint-Martin. Rue de la Mortellerie
            was east of Place de Grève in the Saint-Gervais <italic>quartier</italic>, far from the
            pro-Burgundian districts identified in the chapter.</p>
        <p> </p>
        <p>It should be noted that the above-mentioned spatial errors will be inconsequential for
            the vast majority of readers of <italic>Public Opinion and Political Contest</italic>
            <italic>in Late Medieval France</italic>. Neither these minor inconsistencies nor the
            density of the chapters detract from the quality of this book and the significant
            contribution it will make to multiple historiographies. </p>
        <p> </p>
    </body>
</article>