You are currently browsing the tag archive for the 'flânerie' tag.
My daughter has reported that I can get grouchy if I don’t manage to catch Channel 4 News.
When it comes to news and current affairs, C4 News is my touchstone, Jon Snow my oracle of choice.
Many people, however, might not be aware that Jon Snow is also a keen bicyclist who pedals to the office on a daily basis – indeed, he has been President of the CTC for the past couple of years – and he frequently blogs about his encounters.
His latest entry – which I encourage you to read – is a heartwarming reminder that where there’s muck, not only is there brass – occasionally you’ll strike gold!
If only all lorry drivers were as considerate of bicyclists. Sadly, there’s a mountain of evidence to the contrary..1, 2, 3
r:B
Extemporaneous virtual flâneurie…experience Haussmann’s Paris by mouse:
Make it full screen and enjoy the sights.
uw
Curious, isn’t it? Applying an essentially post-modernist approach (Wordle.net) to one of the fundamental texts of 19th century French modernism (albeit in translation) reveals the basic themes of the essay but completely loses the vision, vigour and force of the original. Figures…!
Read the original Baudelaire essay here.
Other things I’ve Wordled can be found here and here.
r:B
Yup…been there.
r:B
For some reason I continue to be surprised when correspondents call me Brian. I’ll be frank, that’s not my real name…and, no, neither is Frank!
I enjoy writing under a nom-de-clavier as it provides a limited degree of privacy and a greater degree of intellectual escapism. I can experiment, discuss and develop new themes and ideas without caring one jot about professional credibility. I can even call myself Brian. And yes, I was kidding about the credibility…
Careful readers may have noticed that I prefer to write about bicycles and bicyclism rather than “cycling” – a term too often appropriated by the sport cycling industry to the detriment, I believe, of ordinary riders of bicycles. Let’s be clear, I regard humbly riding a bicycle to work on a daily basis as far more heroic than repeatedly circumcycling a velodrome in pursuit of glory or gold and a damned sight more socially and economically valuable too!
I may not always succeed but I try to treat the bicycle as a metaphor or analogue for something. Ocassionally I’ll just write a meditation on tinkering with an old bicycle – a literary brico-cyc-lage – often with obsessive attention to unimportant detail. If it doesn’t work, it doesn’t matter. Sometimes I get it into my head to dig up random trivia. And quotes! I love finding references which express an attuitude towards the bicycle or bicyclism.
But I digress. The name – Flaneur Brian – is perhaps best considered a polyseme; a vaguely Joycean homonymic homage to Flann O’Brien, author of The Third Policeman, as well as being an amalgam of the Flâneur and the bemused victim of happenstance (epitomised by Brian, in Monty Python’s Life of) to compose a character that represents, to me at least, an archetypal urban bicyclist in the transportation paragone of the twenty-first century.
Have I lost you yet?
Call me eccentric…but you can call me Brian.
R:B
I attached a rudimentary camera mount to the Chiltern some time back but wasn’t entirely satisfied with the results – because the camera was mounted ahead of the handlebars, any movement of the handlebars was highly exaggerated making for some rather comical scenes.
However, I was able to salvage some footage from a trial outing and have finally turned it into a couple of shorts. Here’s a quick dash down the Tay Road Bridge to Dundee and up the river to the “new” Railway Bridge…
R:B





