The book provides a ''flâneur''s eye view' of Parisian life in the first
half of the nineteenth century: dress, cafés and restaurants, but also
shops and passages, the omnibus, 'bals publics' and carnival. The author
provides general conclusions about the private and public spheres in 'le
vieux Paris'. Like the 'flâneur', the author concentrates less on
factual information for its own sake - which may be found in the
secondary works cited in the text and footnotes - than on the
'semiological' or anthropological significance of the cultural forms in
question. Links are drawn between cultural institutions and class
relations in pre-1850 Paris, with particular emphasis on cultural
inequality, on the persistence of cross-class contacts, and the growing
differences between classes as reflected in behaviour and attitudes.