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The Flaneur - Walking in the City

Laurie Taylor presents a themed programme that explores the history and meaning of the urban stroller, past and present.

Walking in the city: The flaneur and flaneuse. Laurie Taylor presents a themed programme which explores the history and meaning of the urban stroller, past and present.
Keith Tester, Adjunct Professor at the Thesis Eleven Centre for Cultural Sociology, LaTrobe University, Melbourne, charts the origins of the 'Flaneur'; the "man of the crowd" of Edgar Allan Poe and Charles Baudelaire, and one of the heroes of Walter Benjamin's Arcades Project.
Matthew Beamont, co-director of University College London's Urban Lab, contends that the city idler isn't simply a by product of modernism, illuminating London's past via the nocturnal wanderings of poets, novelists and thinkers.
And Lauren Elkin, lecturer in the department of English and Comparative Literature at the American University of Paris, counters the implicit assumption that the city belongs to a figure of masculine privilege and leisure. She introduces us to the transgressive 'flaneuse' who claims the right to city space.

Producer: Jayne Egerton.

Available now

28 minutes

Last on

Mon 2 May 2016 00:15

RELATED LINKS

Keith Tester at the Thesis Eleven Centre for Cultural Sociology at


READING LIST

Matthew Beaumont, Nightwalking: A Nocturnal History of London, Chaucer to Dickens (Verso, 2015)

The Flaneur - a collection of essays, edited by Keith Tester, (London Routledge, 1994)

Lauren Elkin, Flaneuse: The (Feminine) Art of Walking in Cities (Chatto and Windus, 2016)

Broadcasts

  • Wed 27 Apr 2016 16:00
  • Mon 2 May 2016 00:15

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This programme is co-produced by the Open University.

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