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Papermaking in Eighteenth-Century France

Management, Labor, and Revolution at the Montgolfier Mill, 1761-1805

Leonard N. Rosenband

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Eight years before the French Revolution, the paper mill at Vidalon-le-Haut was the setting for a bitter strike and successful lockout. This labor dispute, resulting from conflicts between master papermakers and skilled journeymen, ultimately benefitted the mill's owners and administrators—the Montgolfier family. They converted the 1781 lockout into an opportunity to train a new kind of worker, a malleable employee, and to fashion a new sort of workplace, a theater of technological experiment.

Papermaking in Eighteenth-Century France: Management, Labor, and Revolution at the Montgolfier Mill...

Eight years before the French Revolution, the paper mill at Vidalon-le-Haut was the setting for a bitter strike and successful lockout. This labor dispute, resulting from conflicts between master papermakers and skilled journeymen, ultimately benefitted the mill's owners and administrators—the Montgolfier family. They converted the 1781 lockout into an opportunity to train a new kind of worker, a malleable employee, and to fashion a new sort of workplace, a theater of technological experiment.

Papermaking in Eighteenth-Century France: Management, Labor, and Revolution at the Montgolfier Mill, 1761-1805, gives us history from the workshop up, offering the most comprehensive exploration available of the historical experience of papermaking. Leonard N. Rosenband explains how paper was made, depicting the tools, techniques, raw materials, and seasonable flows of the craft, and explores the many conflicts and compromises between masters and men. Rosenband provides a compelling account of how technological change affected the papermaking industry, transforming an elaborate, established system of production.

The Montgolfier archives are a rich source of information, providing records of daily output and procedures, including complex rules ranging from the precise hours of meals and prayer to matters of propriety and personal sanitation. They also provide insight into the attitudes of the Montgolfier family and their workers—what they made of their trade, their labor, and one another. This case study of the Montgolfier mill, adding details about technological innovation and shopfloor relations during a time of social unrest, enriches the current debate about the nature and impact of capitalism in France during the years leading up to the French Revolution.

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Reviews

A richly textured account... The benefit to Rosenband's approach is its nuance and richness of detail that allows readers to enter into the world of papermaking and to follow the peculiar logic of the culture and institutional arrangements of this industry. Those who want to experience one segment of an evolving artisanal world of work from the ground up will find much to savor.

While Leonard N. Rosenband's monograph is primarily a study of one mill and its enterprising owners, it can serve as an English-language introduction to the whole subject of artisanal papermaking.

Elegantly written and well researched.

A significant contribution to an almost unknown economic sector, papermaking... As interesting for the historian of Modern France before the Revolution as it is for the historian of the nineteenth-century economy. Both will find in Rosenband's work reliable information, deep knowledge and reflection.

Papermaking in Eighteenth-Century France provides a fresh model for historians... This book poses a fundamental challange to many orthodox methods and conventional approaches in economic history and the history of technology. It raises an many questions as it answers... With any luck, it will motivate others to tend this rich and, until now, relatively unculitvated ground.

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About

Book Details

Publication Date
Status
Available
Trim Size
6
x
9
Pages
232
ISBN
9780801863929
Illustration Description
6 halftones, 2 line drawings
Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments
Money, Weights, and Measures
Part I: An Old Industry
Chapter 1. French Industry in the Eighteenth Century
Chapter 2. Making Paper
Chapter 3. The Montgolfiers and Their Craft
Chapter 4

Preface
Acknowledgments
Money, Weights, and Measures
Part I: An Old Industry
Chapter 1. French Industry in the Eighteenth Century
Chapter 2. Making Paper
Chapter 3. The Montgolfiers and Their Craft
Chapter 4. Rags, Regulation, and Government Stimulation
Part II: The "Modes" and the Lockout of 1781
Chapter 5. Building the Beaters and the Journeymen's Custom
Chapter 6. The Lockout
Part III: Managing to Rule
Chapter 7. The New Regime
Chapter 8. Hiring and Firing
Chapter 9. Paternalism
Chapter 10. Wages
Chapter 11. Discipline
Part IV: Measuring Change
Chapter 12. Technological Transfer
Chapter 13. Persistence
Chapter 14. Attitudes
Chapter 15. Productivity
Chapter 16. The Hierarchy of Vats
Part V: The End of Hand Papermaking
Chapter 17. The French Revolution and the Papermaking Machine
Conclusion
Appendix: Tables and Graph
Notes
Note on Sources
Index
Illustrations Appear on Pages 16-21

Author Bio
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Leonard N. Rosenband

Leonard N. Rosenband is a professor of history at Utah State University. He coedited, with Thomas M. Safley, The Workplace before the Factory: Artisans and Proletarians, 1500-1800.