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Flânerie as a Strategy: Revolutionary Ideas of Avant-Gardes in the Co-Authorship of Asja Lācis and Walter Benjamin

  • Sanita Duka

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The article discusses the essay “Naples” (1925), co-authored by Asja Lācis (née Anna Liepiņa, married Lācis or Lāce, 1891–1979) and Walter Benjamin (1892–1940). This case study reflects flânerie used as a creative strategy. The narrator, a figure of urban wandering and detached observation, was implemented by the co-authors stressing the differences in the interpretation by a man and a woman – flâneur and flâneuse. They portray Naples through contrasting perspectives: Benjamin, the philosopher, views the city as a system, examining its structures and categories, while Lācis, the theatre director, approaches it as a dynamic performance. This convergence of viewpoints creates a unique narrative voice. The article sheds light on the theatrical implications used in urban exploration and proves the input of Lācis by exploring parallels in her educational experience, creative works, letters and publications. Under the influence of collaboration with Lācis, Benjamin developed the signature philosophical style and initial impulse in this essay by introducing metaphors of porosity and constellation, later developed as concepts. The paper concludes that flânerie, used as a strategy of exploration and narration, integrates the vitality of lived experience with theatre and philosophy to inspire fresh perspectives on seeing and being in the world, thus embodying the revolutionary avant-garde pursuit of transcending boundaries, whether artistic, ideological or cultural and reinforcing its innovative and transformative intent.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)262-277
Number of pages16
JournalAmfiteater
Volume13
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Keywords

  • constellation
  • creative collaboration
  • flâneur and flâneuse
  • lived experience
  • Naples
  • narrative voice
  • porosity
  • urban theatricality

OECD Field of Science

  • 6.4 Arts (Arts, History of Arts, Performing arts, Music)

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