1.
Art History and Visual Culture - LibGuides at University of Exeter, http://libguides.exeter.ac.uk/AHVC.
2.
Sutcliffe, A.: Chapter 2 - ‘Paris at the Dawn of the Renaissance’. In: Paris: an architectural history. pp. 8–23. Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn (1993).
3.
Ballon, H.: ‘Introduction’. In: The Paris of Henri IV: architecture and urbanism. pp. 1–13. Architectural History Foundation, New York (1991).
4.
Branner, R.: Chapter 1 - ‘Paris, the King and the Arts’. In: St. Louis and the Court Style in Gothic architecture. pp. 1–11. Zwemmer, London (1965).
5.
Sutcliffe, A.: Chapter 3 - ‘Creating a French Urban Architecture 1650-1715’. In: Paris: an architectural history. pp. 24–47. Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn (1993).
6.
Dennis, M.: ‘The Baroque Hôtel’. In: Court and garden: from the French hôtel to the city of modern architecture. pp. 44-51-72–74. MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass (1988).
7.
Dennis, M.: ‘The Rococo Hotel’. In: Court and garden: from the French hôtel to the city of modern architecture. pp. 80–96. MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass (1988).
8.
Bergdoll, B.: Chapter 1 - ‘Neoclassicism, science, archaeology and the doctrine of progress’. In: European architecture: 1750-1980. pp. 1–32. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2000).
9.
Cleary, R.: Chapter 5 - ‘The Place Royale and the City’. In: The place royale and urban design in the ancien régime. pp. 108–133. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2011).
10.
Ballon, H., Friedman, D.: ‘Portraying the City in Early Modern Europe: Measurement, Representation, and Planning’. In: The history of cartography. pp. 680–705. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Ill (1987).
11.
Ballon, H.: Chapter 2 - ‘Architecture and Imagery: The New Rome’. In: Louis Le Vau: Mazarin’s Collège, Colbert’s revenge. pp. 32–91. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (1999).
12.
Sutcliffe, A.: Chapter 4 - ‘The Eighteenth Century: Architectural Harmonization at the Close of the Ancien Régime’. In: Paris: an architectural history. pp. 48–62. Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn (1993).
13.
Bergdoll, B.: European architecture: 1750-1980. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2000).
14.
Sutcliffe, A.: Chapter 5 - ‘Revolution, Empire and Restoration: The Implications for Architecture 1789 – 1852’. In: Paris: an architectural history. pp. 67–79. Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn (1993).
15.
Vidler, A.: ‘The Rhetoric of Monumentality: Ledoux and the Barrières of Paris’. AA Files. 14–29 (1984).
16.
Thompson, V.E.: 'Telling "Spatial Stories”: Urban Space and Bourgeois Identity in Early Nineteenth‐Century Paris’. The Journal of Modern History. 75, 523–556 (2003).
17.
Braham, A.: Chapter 2 - ‘Official taste of the mid-century: Gabriel; Marigny and Soufflot’. In: The architecture of the French Enlightenment. pp. 37–47. Thames and Hudson, London (1980).
18.
Braham, A.: Chapter 7 - ‘Three Paris Architects: Le Camus Mézières, Boullé and Antoine’. In: The architecture of the French Enlightenment. pp. 109–122. Thames and Hudson, London (1980).
19.
Papayanis, N.: ‘Introduction’. In: Planning Paris before Haussmann. pp. 1–12. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore (2004).
20.
Sutcliffe, A.: Chapter 6 - ‘Paris as the Hub of French Industrialization: Building a European Capital Under the Second Empire’. In: Paris: an architectural history. pp. 83–104. Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn (1993).
21.
Girouard, M.: Chapter 14 - ‘Paris and the Boulevards’. In: Cities and people: a social and architectural history. pp. 285–300. Yale University Press, New Haven (1985).
22.
Herbert, R.: ‘Les Grands Boulevards’. In: Impressionism: art, leisure and Parisian society. pp. 14–20. Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn (1988).
23.
Harvey, D.: ‘Introduction: Modernity as Break’. In: Paris, capital of modernity. pp. 1–20. Routledge, New York (2003).
24.
Harvey, D.: Chapter 4 - ‘The Organization of Space Relations’. In: Paris, capital of modernity. pp. 107–116. Routledge, New York (2003).
25.
Mead, C.: ‘Urban Contingency and the Problem of Representation in Second Empire Paris’. Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 54, 138–174 (1995).
26.
Jordan, D.P.: Transforming Paris: the life and labors of Baron Haussmann. The Free Press, New York, New York (1995).
27.
Clark, T.J.: Chapter 3 - ‘The Environs of Paris’. In: The painting of modern life: Paris in the art of Manet and his followers. pp. 147–204. Princeton U.P., Princeton (1989).
28.
Willsdon, C.A.P.: Chapter 7 - ‘“Promenades et Plantations”: Impressionism, conservation and Hausmann’s reinvention of Paris’. In: Fowle, F. and Thomson, R. (eds.) Soil and stone: impressionism, urbanism, environment. pp. 107–124. Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, London (2017).
29.
Dombrowski, A.: ‘History, Memory, and Instantaneity in Edgar Degas’s “Place de la Concorde”’. The Art Bulletin. 93, 195–219 (2011).
30.
Kessler, M.: ‘Filters and Pathologies: Caillebotte and Manet in Haussmann’s Paris’. Nineteenth-Century Contexts. 27, 245–268 (2005).
31.
Herbert, R.L.: Chapter 6 - ‘Industry in the Changing Landscape from Daubigny to Monet’. In: French cities in the nineteenth century. pp. 139–164. Hutchinson, London (1982).
32.
Rubin, J.H.: Impressionism and the modern landscape: productivity, technology, and urbanization from Manet to Van Gogh. University of California Press, Berkeley (2008).
33.
Wrigley, R.: ‘Unreliable Witness: The Flâneur as Artist and Spectator of Art in Nineteenth-Century Paris’. Oxford Art Journal. 39, 267–284 (2016).
34.
Cusack, T.: ‘Bourgeois Leisure on the Seine: Impressionism, Forgetting and National Identity in the French Third Republic’. National Identities. 9, 163–182 (2007).
35.
Harvey, D.: Paris, capital of modernity. Routledge, New York (2003).
36.
Herbert, R.L.: Impressionism: art, leisure and Parisian society. Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn (1988).
37.
Clark, T.J.: Chapter 4 - ‘The Bar at the Folies-Bergere’. In: The painting of modern life: Paris in the art of Manet and his followers. pp. 205–258. Princeton U.P., Princeton (1989).
38.
Armstrong, C.M.: ‘Edgar Degas and the Representation of the Female Body’. In: The female body in Western culture: contemporary perspectives. pp. 223–242. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1986).
39.
Clayson, H.: The Sexual Politics of Impressionist Illegibility. In: Dealing with Degas: representations of women and the politics of vision. pp. 66–79. Pandora, London (1992).
40.
Benjamin, W.: Chapter 2 - ‘The Flaneur’. In: Charles Baudelaire: a lyric poet in the era of high capitalism. pp. 35–66. Verso, London (1983).
41.
Baudelaire, C., Scarfe, F.: The complete verse. Anvil Press Poetry, London (2012).
42.
Baudelaire, C.: Le Crépuscule du soir (Evening Crepuscule), https://fleursdumal.org/poem/166.
43.
Baudelaire, C.: À une passante (To a Passerby), https://fleursdumal.org/poem/224.
44.
Baudelaire, C.: Les foules - (The Crowd), https://www.poesie-francaise.fr/charles-baudelaire/poeme-les-foules.php.
45.
Baudelaire, C.: L’Homme et la mer (Man and the Sea), https://fleursdumal.org/poem/113.
46.
Nochlin, L.: ‘Body Politics: Seurat’s Poseuses’. Art in America. 82,.
47.
Pollock, G.: Chapter 3 - ‘Modernity and the Spaces of Feminity’. In: Vision and difference: feminism, femininity and the histories of art. pp. 70–127. Routledge, London (2003).
48.
Broun, E.: ‘Childe Hassam’s America’. American Art. 13, 32–57 (1999).
49.
Rice, S.: Chapter 3 - ‘Still Points in a Turning World’. In: Parisian views. pp. 84–117. MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass (1997).
50.
Harvey, D.: Paris, capital of modernity. Routledge, New York (2003).
51.
Higonnet, P.L.R.: Chapter 1 - ‘A City of Myths’. In: Paris: capital of the world. pp. 1–17. Belknap, Cambridge, Mass (2002).
52.
Almandoz Marte, A.: Planning Latin America’s capital cities, 1850-1950. Routledge, London (2002).
53.
Almandoz, A.: ‘The garden city in early twentieth-century Latin America’. Urban History. 31, 437–452 (2004).
54.
Carranza, L.E., Lara, F.L., Liernur, J.F.: Modern architecture in Latin America: art, technology, and utopia. University of Texas Press, Austin (2014).
55.
Daughton, J.P.: 'When Argentina Was "French”: Rethinking Cultural Politics and European Imperialism in Belle‐Époque Buenos Aires’. The Journal of Modern History. 80, 831–864 (2008).
56.
Moody, S.T.: Modern form in the periphery: Poetics, urban space, and gender in Buenos Aires and Rio de Janeiro, 1880–1915. 141–157 (2010).
57.
Needell, J.D.: ‘Rio de Janeiro and Buenos Aires: Public Space and Public Consciousness in Fin-De-Siecle Latin America’. Comparative Studies in Society and History. 37, 519–540 (1995).
58.
Schenker, H.M.: Melodramatic landscapes: urban parks in the nineteenth century. University of Virginia Press, Charlottesville (2009).
59.
Wilson-Bareau, J., National Gallery (London): Manet: the Execution of Maximilian: painting, politics and censorship. , London (1992).
60.
Cunningham, M.: Mexico and the Foreign Policy of Napoleon III. (2001).
61.
Elton, J.F.: With the French in Mexico.
62.
Kandell, J.: La capital: the biography of Mexico City. Random House, New York (1988).
63.
Keratry, E.D.: The Rise and Fall of the Emperor Maximilian: a narrative of the mexican empire, 1861-7. FORGOTTEN BOOKS, [S.l.] (2015).
64.
Naggar, C., Ritchin, F.: México through foreign eyes, 1850-1990: visto por ojos extranjeros. W.W. Norton & Company, New York (1996).
65.
Newson, L.A., King, J., British Academy: Mexico City through history and culture. Oxford University Press, Oxford.
66.
Wasserman, M.: Everyday life and politics in nineteenth century Mexico: men, women, and war. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque (2002).
67.
Guaita, O.: On distant shores: colonial houses around the world. Monacelli Press, New York, N.Y. (1999).
68.
Buisseret, D.: Mapping the French Empire in North America: an interpretive guide to the exhibition mounted at the Newberry Library on the occasion of the seventeenth annual Conference of the French Colonial Historical Society, La Société dʼHistoire Coloniale Française, with the support of Barry MacLean. Newberry Library, Chicago (1991).
69.
Chénier, R.: Québec: a French colonial town in America, 1660 to 1690. National Historic Sites, Parks Service, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ont (1991).
70.
Rouleau, S.: ‘An archaeological view of the French colonial port of Québec’. Post-Medieval Archaeology. 43, 229–244 (2009).
71.
Ruddel, D.T.: Québec City, 1765-1832 : the evolution of a colonial town. Canadian Museum of History (1987).
72.
Epstein, C.: Montreal, city of spires: church architecture during the British Colonial period, 1760-1860. Presses de l’Université du Québec, Québec (2012).
73.
Germain, A., Rose, D.: Montréal: the quest for a metropolis. Wiley, Chichester (2000).
74.
Cagnato, C., Fritz, G., Dawdy, S.: ‘Strolling through Madame Mandeville’s Garden: the real and imagined landscape of eighteenth century New Orleans, Louisiana’. Journal of ethnobiology. 35, 235–261.
75.
Dawdy, S.L.: Building the Devil’s Empire. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (2008).
76.
Ferrer, A.: Freedom’s Mirror: Cuba and Haiti in the age of revolution. Cambridge University Press, New York (2014).
77.
Garrigus, J.D.: Before Haiti: Race and Citizenship in French Saint-Domingue. (2006).
78.
McClellan, J.E., Saint-Louis, V.: Colonialism and Science: Saint Domingue and the Old Regime. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1992).
79.
Moreau de Saint-Méry, M.L.E., Spencer, I.D.: A civilization that perished: the last years of white colonial rule in Haiti. University Press of America, Lanham, MD (1985).
80.
Popkin, J.D.: A concise history of the Haitian Revolution. Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford (2011).
81.
Chopra, P.: 5. Pondicherry - a French enclave in India. In: Forms of dominance: on the architecture and urbanism of the colonial enterprise. pp. 107–138. Avebury, Aldershot (1992).
82.
Davies, S., Sánchez Espinosa, G., Roberts, D.S.: India and Europe in the global eighteenth century. Voltaire Foundation, Oxford (2014).
83.
Deloche, J.: Origins of the urban development of Pondicherry according to seventeenth century Dutch plans. Institut Français de Pondichéry, [Pondicherry] (2004).
84.
Njoh, A.J.: ‘Europeans, modern urban planning and the acculturation of “racial others”’. Planning Theory. 9, 369–378 (2010).
85.
Armstrong, C.: Odd man out: readings of the work and reputation of Edgar Degas. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1991).
86.
Branner, R.: St. Louis and the Court Style in Gothic architecture. Zwemmer, London (1965).
87.
Baudelaire, C.: Chapter 1 - ‘The Painter of Modern Life’. In: The painter of modern life and other essays. pp. 1–41. Phaidon Press, London (1995).
88.
Callen, A.: The work of art: plein-air painting and artistic identity in nineteenth-century France. Reaktion Books, London, England (2015).
89.
Clayson, H.: Painted love: prostitution in French art of the impressionist era. Yale U.P., New Haven (1991).
90.
Crary, J.: Techniques of the observer: on vision and modernity in the nineteenth century. M.I.T. Press, Cambridge,Mass (1992).
91.
DeJean, J.E.: How Paris became Paris: the invention of the modern city. Bloomsbury USA, New York (2015).
92.
Dombrowski, A.: ‘History, Memory, and Instantaneity in Edgar Degas’s “Place de la Concorde”’. The Art Bulletin. 93, 195–219 (2011).
93.
Eisenman, S.F.: Chapter 19 - ‘The Intransigent Artist or How the Impressionists Got Their Name’. In: Art in modern culture: an anthology of critical texts. pp. 189–198. Phaidon Press, London (1992).
94.
Herbert, R.L.: Chapter 6 - ‘Industry in the Changing Landscape from Daubigny to Monet’. In: French cities in the nineteenth century. pp. 139–164. Hutchinson, London (1982).
95.
Hutton, J.: ‘Camile Pissarro’s Turpitudes Sociales and Late Nineteenth-Century French Anarchist Anti-Feminism’. History Workshop. 32–61 (1987).
96.
Jones, C.D.H.: Paris: biography of a city. Penguin, London (2006).
97.
Kirkland, S.: Paris reborn: Napolóen III, Baron Haussmann, and the quest to rebuild a modern city. Picador, New York (2014).
98.
Krell, A.: Manet and the painters of contemporary life. Thames & Hudson, London (1996).
99.
Lees, A.: The city: a world history. Oxford University Press, New York, New York (2015).
100.
Mainardi, P.: Art and politics of the Second Empire: the universal expositions of 1855 and 1867. Yale University Press, New Haven (1987).
101.
Wilson-Bareau, J., National Gallery (London): Manet: the Execution of Maximilian: painting, politics and censorship. , London (1992).
102.
Nochlin, L.: ‘Body Politics: Seurat’s Poseuses’. Art in America. 82,.
103.
Pinkney, D.H.: Napoleon III and the rebuilding of Paris. Princeton University Press (1958).
104.
Ranum, O.A.: Paris in the age of absolutism: an essay. Wiley, Chichester (1968).
105.
Rubin, J.H.: Impressionism. Phaidon Press, London (1999).
106.
Sidlauskas, S.: ‘Resisting Narrative: The Problem of Edgar Degas’s Interior’. The Art Bulletin. 75, (1993).
107.
Smith, P.: ‘‘Parbleu’: Pissarro and the Political Colour of an Original Vision’ [in] Art History. Art History. 15, 223–247 (1992).
108.
LeGates, R.T., Stout, F. eds: The City Reader. Routledge, London (2015).
109.
Moffett, C.S., Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, National Gallery of Art (Washington): The new painting: Impressionism 1874-1886. Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, San Francisco, Calif (1986).
110.
Thomson, R.: Ruins, Rhetoric and Revolution: Paul Signac’s Le Démolisseur and Anarchism in the 1890s. Art History. 36, 366–391 (2013).
111.
Velay, P.: From Lutetia to Paris: the island and the two banks. CNRS, Paris (1992).
112.
Ward, M.: Chapter 3 - ‘Pissaro and the New Technique’. In: Pissarro, Neo-impressionism, and the spaces of the avant-garde. pp. 64–87. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (2000).
113.
Wechsler, J.: A human comedy: physiognomy and caricature in 19th century Paris. Thames and Hudson, London (1982).
114.
Wright, A.: ‘Mourning, Painting, and the Commune: Maximilien Luce’s A Paris Street in 1871’. Oxford Art Journal. 32, 225–242 (2009).
115.
Wright, G.: The politics of design in French colonial urbanism. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1991).
116.
Young, M.: Realism in the age of impressionism: painting and the politics of time. Yale University Press, New Haven (2015).