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Developing My Research Philosophy Part 4: Le Flâneur Politique

Walter Benjamin: The Arcades Project

I believe that philosophy is the proper starting place for any human endeavour. While I was on long service leave, I was trying to formulate my research philosophy, and trying to work out how I could "fit in" in an increasingly bureaucratic world. After reading Ryan Holiday and Steven Pressfield, I found Stoic philosophy helpful: we can rationally decide what is and what is not within our control. Once this is done, even in relation to my research, then the rest falls into place.

Walter Benjamin's work The Arcades Project interests me from a number of angles. I devoured The Flâneur "Convolute M." (1999, pp. 416-455). Later, "Le Flâneur" surfaced while I was reading the Paris Review, and the idea of the nineteenth-century Parisian flâneur struck me as a model for my research philosophy. I want to be able to study politics and policy without being an essential part of the machine, but I still have to play the game. Enter:
The figure of the flâneur—the stroller, the passionate wanderer emblematic of nineteenth-century French literary culture—has always been essentially timeless; he removes himself from the world while he stands astride its heart. When Walter Benjamin brought Baudelaire’s conception of the flâneur into the academy, he marked the idea as an essential part of our ideas of modernism and urbanism. For Benjamin, in his critical examinations of Baudelaire’s work, the flâneur heralded an incisive analysis of modernity, perhaps because of his connotations: “[the flâneur] was a figure of the modern artist-poet, a figure keenly aware of the bustle of modern life, an amateur detective and investigator of the city, but also a sign of the alienation of the city and of capitalism,” as a 2004 article in the American Historical Review put it. Since Benjamin, the academic establishment has used the flâneur as a vehicle for the examination of the conditions of modernity—urban life, alienation, class tensions, and the like. 
The direction my philosophy took was exciting. I had found a unifying principle for all the things I enjoy: art, music, philosophy, history, reading, architecture, theatre, and so on. Benjamin understood a similar approach: The 'variegated traces of daily life of "the collective"... was to be the object of study, and with methods - above all, in their dependence on chance - to the nineteenth century collector of antiquities and curiosities, or indeed the methods of the nineteenth-century ragpicker, than to those of the modern historian' (p. ix). 

As an historical institutionalist, the "historical rummaging" (see Skocpol, T. (1995). ‘Why I Am an Historical Institutionalist’, Polity, 28(1): 103-106) is part of the satisfaction, especially when one finds the historical gem.

The approach, when combined with Stoicism, has allowed me to overcome the constant dissatisfaction that surrounded me before moving to Gunning: cheap architecture,  people glued to their phones, academics telling me they didn't have time to read books, me pretending to know something when I had never read the work from cover to cover.

General George S. Patton believed in reincarnation and claimed to have been in combat many times throughout history. I often think of him as someone born in the wrong era. But I never quite thought that for my own dissatisfaction with this era.

I suppose the idea of le flâneur politique gives me a steampunk approach to academe and the political - I get to enjoy the best of both worlds. And that, I think, completes my four-part contemplation of my research philosophy and six months of thinking about it.

Related posts:



Le Flâneur
Paul Gavarni [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

Podcast Trial

©Depositphotos.com/@skynet


This is my first podcast. It is only for testing the systems I am trying to use. I thought this would be easy but maybe not! I am still having troubles with linking my RSS to Stitcher. It works fine on Soundcloud. I am having all sorts of issues.

Lenny is at the Crookwell Veterinary Hospital tonight
First, my microphone is great. But I cannot listen while I record because the latency is so bad, I keep slowing my voice down to compensate and it's not a good look. I need to solve this. Today's podcast was recorded without me being able to hear myself. I felt like I was on The King's Speech and Geoffrey Rush was treating me.

Next, Stitcher doesn't like my RSS feed from my blog. I use the Google Blogger platform but linked via my ISP to my domain name. It works for everything except Stitcher, which is my preferred podcast platform. I am waiting for their support area to get back to me.

Once I am up and running, I hope to interview people on a regular basis. And my cat, Lenny, is spending the night at the Crookwell Veterinary Hospital and I miss him.








RSS and Podcast Renaissance: Tom Kantor, Pulsar Music, and Rail Dynamics




The AK-47 of Phones and Dodo Birds

I remember buying the Nokia 6210 WAP phone for a cool $800 back in the early 2000s. Bob Geldof called it the AK-47 of phones and was still using one in 2014. WAP was hopeless. it was a complete waste of time and money. While I am pleased 'Sir' Bob got his money's worth, I really thought that RSS and podcasts were in a museum of popular culture somewhere as a reminder of the olden days.

I remember iPodder. It never worked. Not once. Then just a little while ago, RSS and podcasts were back! So here's a little story about the Renaissance of RSS and podcasts, and some interesting discoveries I made using these old school tools.

The Renaissance of Really Simple Syndication (or Rich Site Summary for purists)

I often commute for up to two hours per day, and this has opened up the whole old world of podcasts, which has opened up a whole old world of RSS. I say old world because I thought RSS and podcasting would have gone the way of the WAP phone by now. But no, RSS and podcasts are experiencing a renaissance.

I used RSS years ago and I had almost forgotten about it until I listened to a podcast. Good old Feedly was recommended, so back I went. I have dropped out of social media several times (except this blog), and each time I rationalise all the apps and social media sites I use, and Feedly (along with iPodder, which is now Juice) was an early casualty. 

One of the things I have been doing unsuccessfully is subscribing to a number of websites. But my personal email ends up as a stack of unread emails about things I might be interested in but rarely get the chance to read unless I print them out or let them sit in the inbox or open on tab in my browser for an eternity.

When Twitter first came out (I was an avid user back then, not so much now it is over-run by trad media. Twitter has been a casualty of rationalisation several times), I remember the discussions about how it was a stream, like a river where everything floated past and you might look at things of interest, but if you missed it and it wasn't popular, then c'est la vie.

Email is like a dam - it fills up and fills up until it either explodes or you have to open the flood gates and let the stored energy disappear in a rush. Either way, you miss out on things. C'est la vie.

So Feedly it is. I find myself unsubscribing to all the email subscriptions that clutter up my inbox and I daresay I miss out on more than I do using the RSS aggregator. When I unsubscribe, I am providing feedback to say that I am still following on RSS. 

Occasionally, I find websites that I want to follow but there is no ready RSS feed. They are stuck in the Middle Ages I guess.

So now I subscribe to various RSS feeds through Feedly. I simply search for what I want, delete what I don't. For example, if it has 'Trump' in the title it gets deleted. Instantly. It makes no difference to my current affairs knowledge and I stay remarkably happier. 

Not because I care about Trump. I just don't care about Trump. Whenever anyone says they are a world beater, I say let them have a go. They all go the way of the WAP phone. I don't need to read about it every second of my short life.

Occasionally, I stumble upon really interesting things. The video made by Tom Kantor at the top of this page is one example. Filmmaker Tom Kantor, died too young, son of philanthropist Anne Kantor, sister of Rupert Murdoch; Tom's sister runs the Poola Charitable Foundation.

The film is haunting. It provides the sounds of my childhood. A sound so familiar I pretend to cringe in case anybody notices. And the haunting scenes of familiar brands and that empty landscape, always present, unpaved, the new discarded upon the ancient. The rich kid who went to Swinburne TAFE, and they who have unknowingly educated angels. Brilliant.

Podcasts are great. And I am learning so much I simply must use them in my teaching

For listening to podcasts, I find Stitcher suits me best. I was thinking of using Stitcher for my own podcasts, but I cannot seem to login to their content provider portal and they aren't answering my emails, so maybe not. But for now, Stitcher will do.

My favourite podcasts are Art of Manliness and Lapham's Quarterly. But the more I commute, the more I burn through the episodes. Some times there just aren't enough.

Last week I stumbled upon the Smithsonian Institution's podcast "Sidedoor". It's great. Here are two of great discoveries:

Pulsar Sound: An app that makes music out of the stars. Turn the app on, point your phone at the sky, and it makes music based on the frequencies emanating from pulsars. Or something like that. Bet that won't work on your AK-47, Sir Bob.

Rail Dynamics: Emory Cook basically created Hi-Fi. That's not a typo. And he is most famous for his cult hit record, Rail Dynamics. This is a bunch of recordings of steam trains. I can listen to it while I read and write, much like my other favourite composer, John Adams. It is like a naked Pink Floyd album. Just brilliant.

And to top it all off, I found some new music, while trying to put together my first podcast, I stumbled upon some new music. A Russian band, Stoner Train, with a Russian, blues throcalist. Now I have heard it all. And the cover depicts a train, so it's on theme, too.


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