Noir sans frontiers: Reflections on the transnational flâneur-as-detective
Type de matériel :
69
As Walter Benjamin astutely observes in the Arcades Project and elsewhere, one of the earliest incarnations of the flâneur is to be found in the figure of the urban detective as first conceived in the writings of Edgar Allen Poe and Eugene Sue. In this paper I reflect upon this identification and briefly consider the multiple incarnations of the flâneur and the significance of transnational flânerie in the contemporary cultural and political context. Taking the Danish-Swedish-German neo-noir television series The Bridge ( Bron / Broen) as an exemplary contemporary instance of the ‘transnational urban detective,’ I consider three kinds of transationalism: a) how noir itself constitutes a transitional genre, migrating across borders; b) how media products / formats can be embedded, dis-embedded and re-embedded in new and different transnational contexts as part of the global culture industry; c) how noir detectives weave back and forth across and between cities in neighbouring countries as part of their investigations.I conclude with reflections on how the bridge itself – the very symbol of transnationalism – forms a marginal and liminal site, a “non place” and threshold or in-between space (Siegfried Kracauer’s Zwischenräume), and in so doing provides the transitional flaneur-as-detective not so much with a home but a haunt, a locus of habitual return and inescapable melancholy.
Réseaux sociaux