Abstract

The flâneur is intrinsically associated with nineteenth-century Paris through the work of Baudelaire and Benjamin. But his antithetical relationship with the dirt and chaos which characterized Paris during Haussmannization distances him from the often sordid realities of the nineteenth-century city. Two other figures — the failed flâneur and the urban planner — have a more intense relationship with the physical and metaphorical dirt which embodies the nineteenth-century city. The Parisian wanderings of Frédéric Moreau and Aristide Saccard demonstrate that dirt functions as much more than an inconvenient by-product, or a marker of contingency. Instead, it is a means of both representing and commenting on the relationship between passion and place, between sex and city, which is mapped in the nineteenth-century novel.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call