Matthew Stibbe
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Urban space and the political imaginary of the Revolution
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This chapter offers a critical account of historiography since c. 2010 on experiences of the 1918–19 Revolution in urban settings. The first section tackles the question of visual landscapes and soundscapes in general, looking particularly at how the poorest urban districts were often the sites of the greatest violence and social stigmatisation in the last weeks of 1918 and the early months of 1919. Parallels with the Paris Commune of March–May 1871 are brought into the discussion, while posters are set alongside other means of occupying public space, such as speeches containing revolutionary rhetoric or occupation of symbolically important buildings. Subsequent sections go on to look at more specific markers of the urban experience: railway stations, prisons, funeral processions and cemeteries. All of these spatial locations became sites of revolutionary experience and socialist protest in 1918–19, although the left’s battle for urban space grew increasingly defensive and less confident as time went on.

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