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Monthly Archives: October 2012
November 2012
This past month Psychogeographic Review has been reading: ‘To the Lighthouse’ – Virginia Woolf ‘Kid’ – Simon Armitage ‘Four Quartets’ – T.S. Eliot ‘The Yellow Wallpaper’ – Charlotte Perkins Gilman ‘Dracula’ – Bram Stoker … Continue reading
From Streetwalker to Street Walker: The Rise of the Flâneuse
In fact and in fantasy, London had become a contested terrain: new commercial spaces and journalist practices, expanding networks of female philanthropy, and a range of public spectacles . . . enabled workingmen and women of many classes to challenge … Continue reading
Posted in Home
Tagged Chris Jenks, department stores, flanerie, Flaneur, flaneuse, Judith R Walkowitz, Mrs Dalloway, prostitution, sexuality, Virginia Woolf, Walter Benjamin
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Woolf at the Door 2: Mrs Dalloway’s Inner Flâneur
In Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway Peter Walsh is the most obvious flâneur character; he is able to wander the streets of London with an abandon even the patrician Clarissa Dalloway cannot manage. In an encounter which in its imagery … Continue reading
Posted in Home
Tagged Flaneur, James Joyce, London, Mrs Dalloway, Street Haunting, Virginia Woolf
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Woolf at the Door 1: The City and Modernism
(Cities were) more than accidental meeting places and crossing points. They were generative environments of the new arts, focal points of intellectual community, indeed of intellectual conflict and tension. (Malcolm Bradbury and James McFarlane (ed), Modernism: A Guide to European … Continue reading
Posted in Home
Tagged Anna Veronica, Baudelaire, Berlin Alexanderplatz, Charles Dickens, cities, Deborah Parsons, Doblin, Dorothy Richardson, George Gissing, HG Wells, James Joyce, Katherine Mansfield, London, Malcolm Bradbury, modernism, Mrs Dalloway, New Woman, The Mall, TS Eliot, Ulysses, Virginia Woolf, Walter Benjamin
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October 2012
This past month Psychogeographic Review has been reading: ‘Maurice’ – E.M. Forster ‘The Best of Dorothy Parker’ – erm, Dorothy Parker ‘Explorers of the New Century’ – Magnus Mills ‘The Awakening’ – Kate Chopin ‘Journey Through … Continue reading
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