Home » Economy » Exploring the archives and writing History (Librairie Droz “Publications of international economic and social history”, 2022)

Exploring the archives and writing History (Librairie Droz “Publications of international economic and social history”, 2022)

by Alexandra Hartman Editor-in-Chief

2023-11-14 23:00:00
Page 3 to 6: Start pages | Page 7 to 17: Hubert Bonin and Laure Quennouëlle-Corre – General introduction | Page 19 to 25: Christine Nougaret – Chapter one. Roger Nougaret, from archives to banking heritage | Page 27 to 28: Geoffroy de Lassus – Chapter II. Roger Nougaret: a chartist in banking | Page 29 to 30: Jean-Yves Haberer – Chapter III. An unprecedented professional adventure | Page 31 to 37: Jean-François Verny – Chapter IV. Roger Nougaret and the historical archives department of Crédit Lyonnais | Page 39 to 53: Patrick de Villepin – Chapter V. Crossed affinities, mixed destinies | Page 55 to 60: Bibliography of Roger Nougaret | Page 61 to 75: Interviews with Roger Nougaret | Page 77 to 93: Anne Conchon – Chapter VI. Transport supply and information economy | Page 95 to 107: Julien Coppier and Denis Varaschin – Chapter VII. Have grit: the departmental archives of Haute-Savoie | Page 109 to 119: Jean-Claude Daumas – Chapter VIII. Lip, archives and history | Page 121 to 130: Éric Godelier – Chapter IX. “Consulting engineers” | Page 131 to 141: Patrice Marcilloux – Chapter X. From company archives to archives of the world of work | Page 143 to 154: Edwin Green and Sara Kinsey – Chapter XI. Corporate archives as corporate assets | Page 155 to 163: Laurent Ducol – Chapter XII. The Blois adventure | Page 165 to 185: Florence Descamps – Chapter XIII. Implement a History function in a large institution | Page 187 to 198: Laure Quennouëlle-Corre – Chapter XIV. Under the glass ceiling, words of bankers | Page 199 to 215: Nicolas Gueugneau – Chapter XV. The strategy of conservation and valorization of Crédit Lyonnais paper financial securities | Page 217 to 225: Marie Laperdrix – Chapter XVI. Supporting the digital transition of organizations | Page 227 to 243: Joke Mooij – Chapter XVII. Women leaders in Dutch financial history | Page 245 to 260: Lorans Tanatar Baruh – Chapter XVIII. Elites in the urban transformation of Istanbul in the 19th century | Page 261 to 270: Patrice Baubeau – Chapter XIX. From strand to ball: archives, banking, currency and Europe… | Page 271 to 278: Jean-Marc Delaunay – Chapter XX. In the heart of Spain, a French banker | Page 279 to 303: André Straus – Chapter XXI. The major German banks and the Reichsbank at the turn of the 20th century | Page 305 to 319: Benoît Doessant – Chapter XXII. The links between the industrialist Ernest Mercier and finance: myth or reality? | Page 321 to 336: Nicolas Marty – Chapter XXIII. The Parisian Union Bank and the project to create an autonomous Catalan State Bank in the early 1930s | Page 337 to 348: Youssef Cassis – Chapter XXIV. Banking archives and memory of financial crises | Page 349 to 360: Éric Bussière – Chapter XXV. French companies and the construction of a European market: banking strategies in 1958-1992 | Page 361 to 385: Samir Saul – Chapter XXVI. COFACE between economic boom and deceleration (1966-1985) | Page 387 to 403: Maurice Hamon – Chapter XXVII. Capitalism, industry and politics: the Geneva bank Saladin and the Manufacture royale des Glaces de France (1702-1830) | Page 405 to 425: Claire Desbois-Thibault – Chapter XXVIII. Archives serving the history of champagne: the emblematic case of J. Moët & Cie (1792-1832) | Page 427 to 440: Sylvie Vabre – Chapter XXIX. Small technology, big effects. The adoption of the standardized mold in the Roquefort cheese industry | Page 441 to 450: Jean-Philippe Bouilloud – Chapter XXX. Being a financier and humorist at the beginning of the 19th century | Page 451 to 467: Nicolas Stoskopf – Chapter XXXI. Attempt to define the High Bank of the 19th century | Page 469 to 493: Hubert Bonin – Chapter XXXII. Piganeau, Bordeaux banker with forgotten power (from the 1850s to the 1890s) | Page 495 to 510: Hervé Joly – Chapter XXXIII. From Banque Perier to Banque Bauer, Marchal & Cie: from irresistible rise to impossible liquidation | Page 511 to 524: Philippe Verheyde – Chapter XXXIV. Joseph and Didier Haguenauer and the Aryanization of Laine Mod’ | Page 525 to 540: Sabine Effosse – Chapter XXXV. Banks and women: from a proxy relationship to the affirmation of the “woman who counts” in the 1950s and 1970s | Page 541 to 557: Alain Michel – Chapter XXXVI. Archives to draw the portrait of Pierre Bézier and construct the landscape of a Renault engineer (1933-1975) | Page 559 to 580: Patrick Fridenson – Chapter XXXVII. A silence from a great corporate archive: the new Renault headquarters (1968-1975) | Page 581 to 591: Florence Hachez-Leroy – Chapter XXXVIII. From innovation in food packaging to the 20th century | Page 593 to 601: Philippe Mioche – Chapter XXXIX. It might no longer continue as before: a look back at the financial crisis in the steel industry in 1978 | Page 603 to 624: Pascal Pénot – Chapter XL. The company Voyage Conseil, “smile of Crédit agricole” (1970-1988) | Page 625 to 637: Michel Pébereau – Chapter XLI. Reflections on the banking changes of the 1980s-2000s | Page 639 to 649: Presentation of the authors | Pages 651 to 663: Index of personal names | Page 665 to 669: End pages.
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