1.
Zola, Émile: Au Bonheur des dames. Gallimard, [Paris].
2.
Nord, P.G.: Paris shopkeepers and the politics of resentment. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (1986).
3.
Zola, Émile: Au Bonheur des dames. Gallimard, [Paris].
4.
Tiersten, L.: Marianne in the market: envisioning consumer society in fin-de-siècle France. University of California Press, Berkeley, [Calif.] (2001).
5.
Zola, Émile: Au Bonheur des dames. Gallimard, [Paris].
6.
Le Bon, G.: La Psychologie des foules. Alcan (1905).
7.
O’Brien, Patricia: The Kleptomania Diagnosis: Bourgeois Women and Theft in Late Nineteenth-Century France. Journal of Social History. 17,.
8.
Zola, Émile: Au Bonheur des dames. Gallimard, [Paris].
9.
Albert, A.: Les midinettes parisiennes à la Belle Époque : bon goût ou mauvais genre ? Histoire, économie & société. 32e année, 61–74.
10.
Bowlby, R.: Just looking: consumer culture in Dreiser, Gissing, and Zola. Routledge, Abingdon, Oxon (2010).
11.
Crossick, G., Jaumain, S. eds: Cathedrals of consumption: the European department store, 1850-1939. Routledge, Abingdon, Oxon (2018).
12.
Judith G. Coffin: Credit, Consumption, and Images of Women’s Desires: Selling the Sewing Machine in Late Nineteenth-Century France. French Historical Studies. 18, 749–783 (1994).
13.
Chenut, Helen Harden: The Fabric of Gender: Working-class Culture in Third Republic France. Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, PA (2005).
14.
D’Souza, A., McDonough, T. eds: The invisible flâneuse: gender, public space and visual culture in nineteenth-century Paris. Manchester University Press, Manchester (2006).
15.
Giffard, P.: Les grands bazars : Paris sous la Troisième République. Victor Havard (1882).
16.
Goggin, Maureen Daly, Tobin, Beth Fowkes: Material women, 1750-1950: consuming desires and collecting practices. Ashgate, Farnham, Surrey (2009).
17.
Miller, Michael Barry: The Bon Marché: bourgeois culture and the department store, 1869-1920. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (1981).
18.
Nord, Philip G.: Paris shopkeepers and the politics of resentment. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (1986).
19.
Schwartz, V.R.: Spectacular realities: early mass culture in fin-de-siècle Paris. University of California Press, Berkeley (1998).
20.
Tiersten, Lisa: Marianne in the Market: Envisioning Consumer Society in Fin-de-siècle France. University of California Press, Berkeley (2001).
21.
Williams, Rosalind H.: Dream Worlds: Mass Consumption in Late Nineteenth-century France. University of California Press, Berkeley, Calif (1982).
22.
Iskin, Ruth: Modern Women and Parisian Consumer Culture in Impressionist Painting. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2007).
23.
Walker, D.H.: Consumer chronicles: cultures of consumption in modern French literature. Liverpool University Press, Liverpool (2011).
24.
Chessel, M.-E., École des hautes études en sciences sociales. Centre de recherches historiques: Consommateurs engagés à la Belle Époque: la Ligue sociale d’acheteurs. Presses de la Fondation nationale des sciences politiques, [Paris] (2012).
25.
Anne-Sophie Beau: Grand Bazar, modes d’emploi.  Les salariés d’un grand magasin lyonnais, 1886-1974., http://theses.univ-lyon2.fr/documents/lyon2/2001/beau_as#p=0&a=top.
26.
Anne-Sophie Beau: Organisation du travail et emploi des femmes dans le grand commerce : l’exemple du Grand Bazar de Lyon, 1886-1974. Le Mouvement Social. no 217, 11–31.
27.
Anne-Sophie Beau: Les salarié-e-s du grand commerce : des "employé-e-s” ? Travail, genre et sociétés. N° 8, 55–72.
28.
Chaney, D.: Le grand magasin comme forme culturelle. Réseaux. 14, 81–96 (1996). https://doi.org/10.3406/reso.1996.3802.
29.
Wemp, Brian: The Grands Magasins Dufayel, the working class, and the origins of consumer culture in Paris, 1880-1916.
30.
Ellen Furlough: Selling the American Way in Interwar France: ‘Prix Uniques’ and the Salons Des Arts Menagers. Journal of Social History. 26, 491–519 (1993).
31.
Valdour, J.: Ouvriers parisiens d’après guerre : la vie ouvrière, observations vécues. A. Rousseau (1921).
32.
Chenut, Helen Harden: The Fabric of Gender: Working-class Culture in Third Republic France. Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, PA (2005).
33.
Une Leçon des choses: tourism, empire and the nation in interwar France. French Historial Studies. 25, 441–473 (2002).
34.
Harp, Stephen L.: Marketing Michelin: advertising & cultural identity in twentieth-century France. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore (2001).
35.
ADLER, K.H.: Selling France to the French: The French Zone of Occupation in Western Germany, 1945–c.1955. Contemporary European History. 21, 575–595 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0960777312000380.
36.
Duhamel, Georges: Scènes de la vie future. Mercure de France, Paris (1930).
37.
FURLOUGH, E.: Making Mass Vacations: Tourism and Consumer Culture in France, 1930s to 1970s. Comparative Studies in Society and History. 40, (1998). https://doi.org/10.1017/S001041759800108X.
38.
Robert L. Frost: Machine Liberation: Inventing Housewives and Home Appliances in Interwar France. French Historical Studies. 18, 109–130 (1993).
39.
Guy, K.M.: When Champagne Became French: Wine and the Making of a National Identity. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, MD (2007).
40.
HOWARD, S.: THE ADVERTISING INDUSTRY AND ALCOHOL IN INTERWAR FRANCE. The Historical Journal. 51, (2008). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0018246X08006778.
41.
Victoria de Grazia: Mass Culture and Sovereignty: The American Challenge to European Cinemas, 1920-1960. The Journal of Modern History. 61, (1989).
42.
Alary, Éric, Vergez-Chaignon, Bénédicte, Gauvin, Gilles: Au gré des rations et des cartes en métropole. In: Les Français au quotidien, 1939-1949. Perrin, Paris.
43.
Halbwachs, M.: L’évolution des besoins dans les classes ouvrières. (1933).
44.
Valdour, J.: Ouvriers parisiens d’après guerre : la vie ouvrière, observations vécues. A. Rousseau (1921).
45.
Furlough, E.: Une Leçon des choses: tourism, empire and the nation in interwar France. French Historial Studies. 25, 441–473 (2002).
46.
La Revue du Touring Club de France.
47.
Chenut, H.H.: The Fabric of Gender: working-class culture in Third Republic France. Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, PA (2005).
48.
Fourastié, Jean: Les Trente Glorieuses ou La révolution invisible. Fayard, [Paris] (1979).
49.
Baudrillard, J.: Le système des objets. Gallimard, [Paris] (1978).
50.
Ross, K.: Fast cars, clean bodies: decolonization and the reordering of French culture. MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass (1995).
51.
Pulju, R.J.: Women and Mass Consumer Society in Postwar France. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2011).
52.
Sherman, D.J.: Paradis à vendre : tourisme et imitation en Polynésie-Française (1958-1971). Terrain. 39–56 (2005). https://doi.org/10.4000/terrain.2434.
53.
Ellen Furlough: Packaging Pleasures: Club Méditerranée and French Consumer Culture, 1950-1968. French Historical Studies. 18, 65–81 (1993).
54.
Baudrillard, J.: La société de consommation: ses mythes, ses structures. Denoël, [Paris] (1986).
55.
Rioux, Jean-Pierre: La France de la IVe République: 2: L’expansion et l’impuissance, 1952-1958. Éditions du Seuil, [Paris] (1983).
56.
Berstein, Serge: La France de l’expansion: 1: La République Gaullienne 1958-1969. Seuil, Paris (1989).
57.
Berstein, Serge, Rioux, Jean-Pierre: La France de l’expansion: 2: L’apogée Pompidou, 1969-1974. Seuil, Paris (1995).
58.
Clarke, J.: Work, Consumption and Subjectivity in Postwar France: Moulinex and the Meanings of Domestic Appliances 1950s-70s. Journal of Contemporary History. 47, 838–859 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1177/0022009412451292.
59.
Ellen Furlough: Packaging Pleasures: Club Méditerranée and French Consumer Culture, 1950-1968. French Historical Studies. 18, 65–81 (1993).
60.
Richard F. Kuisel: Coca-Cola and the Cold War: The French Face Americanization, 1948-1953. French Historical Studies. 17, 96–116 (1991).
61.
Ross, Kristin: Fast cars, clean bodies: decolonization and the reordering of French culture. MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass (1995).
62.
Sherman, Daniel J.: French primitivism and the ends of empire, 1945--1975. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Ill (2011).
63.
Sherman, D.J.: Paradis à vendre : tourisme et imitation en Polynésie-Française (1958-1971). Terrain. 39–56 (2005). https://doi.org/10.4000/terrain.2434.
64.
Leymonerie, C.: Le Salon des arts ménagers dans les années 1950. Vingtième Siècle. Revue d’histoire. 91, (2006). https://doi.org/10.3917/ving.091.56.
65.
Revue Vingtième Siècle. Revue d’histoire 2006/3, Spécial : Consommer en masse. 91, (2006).
66.
Gaillard, I.: De l’étrange lucarne à la télévision. Vingtième Siècle. Revue d’histoire. 91, (2006). https://doi.org/10.3917/ving.091.09.
67.
Pulju, R.J.: Women and Mass Consumer Society in Postwar France. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2011).
68.
Kuisel, R.F., University of California Press: Seducing the French: the dilemma of Americanization. University of California Press, Berkeley (1993).
69.
FURLOUGH, E.: Making Mass Vacations: Tourism and Consumer Culture in France, 1930s to 1970s. Comparative Studies in Society and History. 40, (1998). https://doi.org/10.1017/S001041759800108X.
70.
Un art de vivre - Video Ina.fr, https://www.ina.fr/video/CPF07011431/un-art-de-vivre-video.html.
71.
Kroen, S.: La magie des objets, le plan Marshall et l’instauration d’une démocratie de consommateurs. In: Chatriot, A., Chessel, M.-E., and Hilton, M. (eds.) Au nom du consommateur.
72.
Weiner, S.: Enfants terribles: youth and femininity in the mass media in France, 1945-1968. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore (2001).
73.
Weiner, S.E.: The Consommatrice of the 1950s in Elsa Triolet’s Roses a credit. French Cultural Studies. 6, 123–144 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1177/095715589500601701.
74.
Susan Weiner: Two Modernities: From ‘Elle’ to ‘Mademoiselle’. Women’s Magazines in Postwar France. Contemporary European History. 8, 395–409 (1999).
75.
Baudrillard, J.: Le système des objets. Gallimard, [Paris] (1978).
76.
Rudolph, N.C.: At Home in Postwar France: modern mass housing and the right to comfort. Berghahn Books, New York (2015). https://doi.org/https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/gla/detail.action?docID=1707821.
77.
Rudolph, N.: Domestic politics: The Cité expérimentale at Noisy-le-Sec in Greater Paris. Modern & Contemporary France. 12, 483–495 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1080/0963948042000284740.
78.
Rudolph, N.C.: Model Homes: Negotiating Interiors in Postwar France. Interiors. 5, 239–257 (2014).
79.
Baudrillard, J.: Le système des objets. Gallimard, [Paris] (1978).
80.
Chatriot, Alain, Chessel, Marie-Emmanuelle, Hilton, Matthew, Au nom du consommateur (Conference): The expert consumer: associations and professionals in consumer society. Ashgate, Aldershot, Hants (2006).
81.
Chessel, M.-E.: Histoire de la consommation. Découverte, Paris (2012).
82.
Corrigan, P.: The sociology of consumption: an introduction. Sage, London (1997).
83.
De Grazia, V., Furlough, E. eds: The sex of things: gender and consumption in historical perspective. University of California Press, Berkeley (1996).
84.
De Grazia, V.: Irresistible empire: America’s advance through twentieth-century Europe. The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts (2006).
85.
Furlough, Ellen, Strikwerda, Carl: Consumers against capitalism?: consumer cooperation in Europe, North America, and Japan, 1840-1990. Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham, Md (1999).
86.
Southerton, D.: Encyclopedia of consumer culture. SAGE, Thousand Oaks, Calif (2011).
87.
Lee, M.J.: The Consumer Society Reader. Blackwell, Oxford (2000).
88.
Rioux, Jean-Pierre, Sirinelli, Jean-François: Histoire culturelle de la France: 4: Le temps des masses: le vingtième siècle. Seuil, Paris (1998).
89.
Trentmann, Frank: The Oxford handbook of the history of consumption. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2012).