Whoring the <i>Flâneur</i>: Re-visioning the American Woman of the Town

Authors

  • Meaghan Malone Memorial University of Newfoundland

Keywords:

flâneur, prostitution, sexuality, gender, disease, commodification, 19th-century American city, “My Kinsman, Major Molineux”, Arthur Mervyn, City Crimes, Hawthorne, Brockden Brown, George Thompson, Lydia Maria Child, Baudelaire, Poe

Abstract

Analyzing a range of nineteenth-century texts, this article argues that the spatially fixed and commodified literary prostitute is a curious—and ultimately inaccurate—analogue to the flâneur. Immortalized by Charles Baudelaire, the flâneur is European, male, and financially secure. A part of and apart from the crowd, he is anonymous and autonomous, independent even within his crowded metropolis. While twentieth-century discussions of female flânerie frequently posit the prostitute as an example of a female flâneur, this article complicates the assumption that female flânerie could exist in nineteenth-century America. Restrictions on the literary prostitute’s mobility undermine her potential for flânerie, and in “My Kinsman, Major Molineux,” Arthur Mervyn, and City Crimes, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Charles Brockden Brown, and George Thompson present prostitutes fettered by their gender and profession. Associated with lax morals, physical contamination, and superfluous consumption, these women remain sequestered in the home, unable to traverse their cities independently or freely.

Author Biography

Meaghan Malone, Memorial University of Newfoundland

Meaghan Malone is a recent MA graduate in English Language and Literature from Memorial University of Newfoundland. A 2012 recipient of Memorial’s Dean’s Excellence Award, she was also honoured as a Fellow of the School of Graduate Studies for 2011-12. She has presented and published on Jane Austen as well as depictions of the psyche in nineteenth-century British literature. Her SSHRC-funded thesis research also analysed masculinity and the gaze in Austen’s major novels.

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Published

2012-10-02

Issue

Section

Articles