Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Belleville rouge, Belleville noir, Belleville rose: The Complex Identity of a Parisian quartier

View through CrossRef
The Parisian quartier of Belleville has long been the subject of scholarly literature and popular culture due to its colourful history and diverse population. Its symbolic boundaries extend beyond the geographical limits imposed by its administrative demarcation. Myths abound as to the extent of its rebellious past, its contemporary image as a melting pot and its prevalence as a décor for the noir genre. In this article a three-tiered categorisation of Belleville is adopted which corresponds to various representations of the suburb in literature, popular culture and from the perspective of its inhabitants. Belleville rouge reflects the quartier’s revolutionary past and the late 20th century struggle associated with its physical metamorphosis. Belleville noir focusses on the quartier’s criminal face, as it is depicted in Parisian film and roman noir and as it exists in reality. Belleville rose highlights the pleasures of the quartier: its cosmopolitan character whose representation verges at times on utopian.    In his Malaussène series (1985-1995), writer and former resident Daniel Pennac portrays Belleville as a unique blend of rouge, noir and rose. This fusion of fairy tale, detective fiction, myth and reality establishes a complex Bellevillois identity distinct from other contemporary representations. The article concludes that it is impossible to associate a single identity with Belleville. The quartier’s contemporary face is inextricably linked to its past, the memory of which is preserved by its inhabitants and by social and literary commentators such as Pennac. In keeping with historian Pierre Nora’s concept of cultural memory, Pennac thus assumes the role of guardian of Belleville’s cultural memory in the face of the quartier’s perpetual evolution.
Title: Belleville rouge, Belleville noir, Belleville rose: The Complex Identity of a Parisian quartier
Description:
The Parisian quartier of Belleville has long been the subject of scholarly literature and popular culture due to its colourful history and diverse population.
Its symbolic boundaries extend beyond the geographical limits imposed by its administrative demarcation.
Myths abound as to the extent of its rebellious past, its contemporary image as a melting pot and its prevalence as a décor for the noir genre.
In this article a three-tiered categorisation of Belleville is adopted which corresponds to various representations of the suburb in literature, popular culture and from the perspective of its inhabitants.
Belleville rouge reflects the quartier’s revolutionary past and the late 20th century struggle associated with its physical metamorphosis.
Belleville noir focusses on the quartier’s criminal face, as it is depicted in Parisian film and roman noir and as it exists in reality.
Belleville rose highlights the pleasures of the quartier: its cosmopolitan character whose representation verges at times on utopian.
    In his Malaussène series (1985-1995), writer and former resident Daniel Pennac portrays Belleville as a unique blend of rouge, noir and rose.
This fusion of fairy tale, detective fiction, myth and reality establishes a complex Bellevillois identity distinct from other contemporary representations.
The article concludes that it is impossible to associate a single identity with Belleville.
The quartier’s contemporary face is inextricably linked to its past, the memory of which is preserved by its inhabitants and by social and literary commentators such as Pennac.
In keeping with historian Pierre Nora’s concept of cultural memory, Pennac thus assumes the role of guardian of Belleville’s cultural memory in the face of the quartier’s perpetual evolution.

Related Results

Evaluation of Rosa Species Accessions for Resistance to Eriophyid Mites1
Evaluation of Rosa Species Accessions for Resistance to Eriophyid Mites1
Abstract Rose rosette disease, caused by rose rosette virus (RRV), is an epidemic affecting nearly every rose cultivar in the United States. The only hosts for Phyllocoptes...
Historical Study of Belleville High School, Belleville, Kansas
Historical Study of Belleville High School, Belleville, Kansas
The purpose of this study was to present a historical study of Belleville High School. More specifically, it was concerned with the curriculum development from 1933 to 1965. The st...
SOCIOCULTURAL IDENTITY POSTMODERN: PROBLEM OF SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION
SOCIOCULTURAL IDENTITY POSTMODERN: PROBLEM OF SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION
Problem setting. The relevance of our study is due to the excessive popularity of the concept of «socio-cultural identity» as a scientific term and tool for studying the postmodern...
Nordic Noir
Nordic Noir
Nordic noir is an emerging crime genre that draws on crime fiction, feature film, and television drama. The term Nordic noir is associated with a region (Scandinavia), with a mood ...
Peripheral Noir, Mediation, and Capitalism: Noir Form, Noir Mediascape, Sociological Noir
Peripheral Noir, Mediation, and Capitalism: Noir Form, Noir Mediascape, Sociological Noir
This chapter reframes noir from the semi-peripheral space of Mexican cinema. The chapter studies noir in Mexican cinema and literature in the context of the history of Fordist capi...
Le rouge et le noir métaphores de l’éternité dans <i>L’Œuvre au noir</i> de Marguerite Yourcenar
Le rouge et le noir métaphores de l’éternité dans <i>L’Œuvre au noir</i> de Marguerite Yourcenar
Dans L’Œuvre au Noir de Marguerite Yourcenar, les couleurs rouge et noire jouent un rôle prégnant et sont liées entre elles jusqu’aux dernières lignes. Surtout présent au travers d...

Back to Top