Baron Haussmann @200, Haussmannization and creative destruction  

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-[[Baron Haussmann @200]]+:''[[creative destruction]], [[surplus product]]''
-[[Baron Haussmann]] ([[1809]] - [[1891]]) was a French urbanist who called himself an "artiste démolisseur," literally translated as ''artist destroyer'', a concept with a political equivalent of [[creative destruction]]. I've mentioned Haussmann and Haussmanization here [http://jahsonic.wordpress.com/2006/10/30/gustave-caillebotte-1848-%e2%80%93-1894/] and here[http://jahsonic.wordpress.com/2006/10/30/boulevards/].+From an original post[http://blog.jahsonic.com/baron-haussmann-200-haussmannization-and-creative-destruction/].
-I've previously reported on [[Baron Haussmann]]+[[Baron Haussmann]] ([[1809]] - [[1891]]) was a French urbanist who called himself an "artiste démolisseur," literally translated as ''artist [[destroyer]]'', a concept with a political equivalent of [[creative destruction]]. I've mentioned Haussmann and [[Haussmannization]] here [http://blog.jahsonic.com/gustave-caillebotte-1848-1894/] and here[http://blog.jahsonic.com/boulevards/].
:''[[Haussmann's renovation of Paris]]'' :''[[Haussmann's renovation of Paris]]''
-'''Baron Georges-Eugène Haussmann''' ([[March 27]], [[1809]] – [[January 11]], [[1891]]) was a [[France|French]] [[urbanist]] whose name is associated with the [[Haussmann's renovation of Paris|rebuilding of Paris]]. His work had destroyed much of the [[medieval city]]. It is estimated that he transformed 60% of Paris' buildings. Notably, he redesigned the [[Place de l'Etoile]], and created long avenues giving perspectives on monuments such as the [[Arc de Triomphe]] and the [[Palais Garnier|Opera Garnier]]. 
-== Criticism == 
-Because of [[Haussmannization]], that is the [[creative destruction]] of something for the betterment of society, the 1860s was a time of intense revolt in Paris. Many Parisians were troubled by the destruction of "old roots". Historian [[Robert Herbert]] says that "the impressionist movement depicted this loss of connection in such paintings as [[Édouard Manet|Manet]]'s ''[[A Bar at the Folies-Bergère|Bar at Folies]]''." The subject of the painting is talking to a man, seen in the mirror behind her, but seems unengaged. According to Herbert, this is a symptom of living in Paris at this time: the citizens became detached from one another. "The continuous destruction of physical Paris led to a destruction of social Paris as well." Haussmann was also criticized for the great cost of his project. Napoléon III fired Haussmann on [[5 January]] [[1870]] in order to improve his own flagging popularity. Haussmann was also a favorite target of the [[Situationist International|Situationist's]] critique; besides pointing out the repressive aims that were achieved by Haussmann's urbanism, [[Guy Debord]] and his friends (who considered [[urbanism]] to be a "state science" or inherently "capitalist" science) also underlined that he nicely separated [[leisure]] areas from work places, thus announcing modern [[functionalism]], as illustrated by [[Le Corbusier]]'s precise zone tripartition (one zone for circulation, another one for accommodations, and the last one for labour). 
-The changes wrought by Baron Haussmann on the streetscape of Paris were documented in the film, "Paris: Living Space", featuring [[Edmund N. Bacon]] and based on sections of his book ''[[Design of Cities]].'' +The '''Haussmann Renovations''', or ''Haussmannization'', of [[Paris]] was a work commissioned by [[Napoléon III]] and led by [[Georges Eugène Haussmann|Baron Georges-Eugène Haussmann]], spanning from [[1852]] to [[1870]].
-"Paris, as we find it in the period following the Revolution of 1848, was about to become uninhabitable." +:''[[creative destruction]], [[surplus product]]''
-[E1a,3] quoting from [[Maxime du Camp]], Paris, vol 6 (Paris, 1875), p.253.+
-Narration+The notion of '''creative destruction''' is found in the writings of [[Mikhail Bakunin]], [[Friedrich Nietzsche]], and in [[Werner Sombart]]'s ''[[Krieg und Kapitalismus]]'' (War and Capitalism) (1913, p. 207), where he wrote: "again out of destruction a new spirit of creativity arises". In ''[[Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy]]'', the Austrian economist [[Joseph Schumpeter]] popularized and used the term to describe the process of transformation that accompanies radical [[innovation]]. In Schumpeter's vision of [[capitalism]], innovative entry by [[entrepreneur]]s was the force that sustained long-term [[economic growth]], even as it destroyed the value of established companies that enjoyed some degree of [[monopoly]] power.
-Its population had been greatly enlarged and unsettled ... and now this population was suffocating in the narrow, tangled, putrid alleyways in which it was forcibly confined." +
-[E1a,3] quoting from Maxime du Camp, Paris, vol 6 (Paris, 1875), p.253.]+
-[[Jules Ferry]]: "[[Les Comptes fantastiques de Haussmann]]"+Interestingly, Flaubert's friend [[Maxime du Camp]] said:
 + 
 +:"Paris, as we find it in the period following the Revolution of 1848, was about to become uninhabitable." --[[Paris Arcades]] quoting from [[Maxime du Camp]], Paris, vol 6 (Paris, 1875), p.253.
 + 
 +and
 + 
 +:"Its population had been greatly enlarged and unsettled ... and now this population was suffocating in the narrow, tangled, putrid alleyways in which it was forcibly confined."
 +[[Paris Arcades]] quoting from Maxime du Camp, Paris, vol 6 (Paris, 1875), p.253.]
 + 
 +It was [[Jules Ferry]] who wrote "[[Les Comptes fantastiques de Haussmann]]," his indictment of the [[bold]] handling of public funds for the [[Haussmannization]]. It was published in 1867, its title being a [[word play|play on words]] between ''contes'', stories or tales - as in ''[[Les contes d'Hoffmann]]'' or ''Tales of Hoffmann'', and ''comptes'', accounts.
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creative destruction, surplus product

From an original post[1].

Baron Haussmann (1809 - 1891) was a French urbanist who called himself an "artiste démolisseur," literally translated as artist destroyer, a concept with a political equivalent of creative destruction. I've mentioned Haussmann and Haussmannization here [2] and here[3].

Haussmann's renovation of Paris

The Haussmann Renovations, or Haussmannization, of Paris was a work commissioned by Napoléon III and led by Baron Georges-Eugène Haussmann, spanning from 1852 to 1870.

creative destruction, surplus product

The notion of creative destruction is found in the writings of Mikhail Bakunin, Friedrich Nietzsche, and in Werner Sombart's Krieg und Kapitalismus (War and Capitalism) (1913, p. 207), where he wrote: "again out of destruction a new spirit of creativity arises". In Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy, the Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter popularized and used the term to describe the process of transformation that accompanies radical innovation. In Schumpeter's vision of capitalism, innovative entry by entrepreneurs was the force that sustained long-term economic growth, even as it destroyed the value of established companies that enjoyed some degree of monopoly power.

Interestingly, Flaubert's friend Maxime du Camp said:

"Paris, as we find it in the period following the Revolution of 1848, was about to become uninhabitable." --Paris Arcades quoting from Maxime du Camp, Paris, vol 6 (Paris, 1875), p.253.

and

"Its population had been greatly enlarged and unsettled ... and now this population was suffocating in the narrow, tangled, putrid alleyways in which it was forcibly confined."

Paris Arcades quoting from Maxime du Camp, Paris, vol 6 (Paris, 1875), p.253.]

It was Jules Ferry who wrote "Les Comptes fantastiques de Haussmann," his indictment of the bold handling of public funds for the Haussmannization. It was published in 1867, its title being a play on words between contes, stories or tales - as in Les contes d'Hoffmann or Tales of Hoffmann, and comptes, accounts.




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