Guinguette

Guinguette atmosphere in the Déjeuner de Canotiers of Auguste Renoir
La guinguette, Vincent van Gogh.

Guinguettes were popular drinking establishments located in the suburbs of Paris and other cities in France. Guinguettes would also serve as restaurants and, often, as dance venues. The origin of the term comes from guinguet, indicating a sour white light local wine. The 1750 Dictionnaire de la langue français, defined Guinguette as a "Small cabaret in the suburbs and the surrounds of Paris, where craftsmen drink in the summer and on Sundays and on Festival days. This term is new. It comes apparently from what are sold in these cabarets: a malicious light local green wine, that is called ginguet, such as found around Paris." A Goguette was a similar kind of establishment.

History

During the 18th century, a consumer revolution led once isolated villages and hamlets outside Paris to be swept up in a booming material culture. Commodities, and particularly alcohol, consumed outside the customs barrier of the city were considerably cheaper, being exempt from state taxes. This encouraged the growth of an entertainment industry just beyond the taxman's reach and a network of drinking establishments was established. They were especially popular on Sundays and holidays, when Parisians would visit to enjoy themselves and to get drunk cheaply.[1] Today, the term 'guingette' is still used for a waterside refreshment stand, particularly open-air, all over France.[2]

The development of railways in the 1880s and the establishment of the "Gare de la Bastille" (Bastille station) with many trains to the east suburbs of Paris (such as Nogent sur Marne) contributed to the success of guinguettes.[2]

Geography

The majority are on the edges of the Seine and the Marne, and some are in a district that stretches to the outskirts of Rouen. Some guinguettes were however far from the rivers, as the picturesque guinguettes of le Plessis-Robinson built among the chestnut trees. There were hundreds of guinguettes as far away as Nogent-sur-Seine, where the nature of the Seine valley changes most.

Tradition decline and return

Today guinguettes are an object of nostalgia. The guinguettes were marvellous places to return to lighter times during the mad years of the 1920s. They were obviously an eminent subject for painting during the first half of the 20th century.

But television and the ban on bathing in the rivers in the 1960s caused the decline of guinguettes. This ban was justified for reasons of hygiene (water quality deteriorated in the 1960s and 1970s) and safety (the risk due to barge traffic and drowning). In the 1960s, guinguettes became a subject of nostalgia. Many people forgot guinguettes, as the French scriptwriter Michel Audiard had one of his characters point out. Since the 1980s, there has been a small revival, particularly along the Marne river. Even now in 2008, some guinguettes stay open every weekend.

As of 2011 a gradual return to modern Guinguettes had started.[3]

See also

References

  1. Colin Jones Paris - Biography of a City, p226, Allen Lane 2004, ISBN 0-7139-9321-9
  2. 1 2 Henri Joannis Deberne, Danser en société, Christine Bonneton editor, 3/1999, Paris ISBN 2-86253-229-0
  3. Los Angeles Times June 28, 2011, by Devorah Lauter

Movies with guinguettes

External links

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