This lecture discusses the literary persona of the Flâneuse, or female wanderer.
Patricia Merivale, English Coach House, Green College, UBC Tuesday, March 7, 5-6:30 pm, reception to follow
in the series Senior Scholars' Series: The Passions that Drive Academic Life
This is the story of a female wanderer or flâneuse in the City of Books, who as a cloistered young scholar learnt to Compare the Literatures, then leapt over the (metaphorical) nunnery wall into four decades of professorial life at UBC. The discipline of Comparative Literature itself changed as those decades rolled by, but she remained an old-fashioned comparatiste (with a final "e"). The feminine gendering of that role is important for its political and professional implications, which had changed considerably by the year 2000, when the wanderer ran into another wall: mandatory retirement. Between those two walls in time, she read closely, compared texts and authors palimpsestically, through each other (a palimpsest is a text written over another still legible beneath it), then gathered books into such sub-genres as “elegiac romance,” by theme, convention, and narrative structure. Key example: the multifariously fascinating Metaphysical Detective Story, whose power lies partly in its intimacy with one of the most “popular” genres of all time. The detective-flâneur tail-jobs a suspect through mean city streets, to discover that he is tailing himself: Jekyll meets Hyde! See Poe, Auster, Egoyan, Borges, Modiano, Abe, Eco...