The flâneuse and the City as uncanny home in Lawrence Durrell’s <i>The Alexandria quartet</i>

The concept of the home is not something that can be readily associated with Lawrence Durrell’s The Alexandria quartet. Generally, the word home is defined as a place where one lives, a house or dwelling. The idea of home is associated with the architectural construct of the house, as both a place a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Allyson Kreuiter
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: AOSIS 2015-07-01
Series:Literator
Online Access:https://literator.org.za/index.php/literator/article/view/1165
id doaj-8e22f15a6f924a19b8a47c0a2f6dd1a6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8e22f15a6f924a19b8a47c0a2f6dd1a62020-11-24T22:54:25ZafrAOSISLiterator0258-22792219-82372015-07-01361e1e810.4102/lit.v36i1.11651105The flâneuse and the City as uncanny home in Lawrence Durrell’s <i>The Alexandria quartet</i>Allyson Kreuiter0Department of English, University of South AfricaThe concept of the home is not something that can be readily associated with Lawrence Durrell’s The Alexandria quartet. Generally, the word home is defined as a place where one lives, a house or dwelling. The idea of home is associated with the architectural construct of the house, as both a place and a space. With this in mind, I approach the conceptualisation of the house as representative of safety and happy remembrance from a somewhat different premise, exploring Durrell’s representation of Alexandria as an enclosing womb-like home that voraciously consumes her inhabitants. Although Durrell’s Alexandria has been considered by scholars from many angles, I propose my position represents a rather different approach to the manner in which the city has previously been examined. Durrell’s city, as uncanny home, will be shown to create her residents as fragments of her own consciousness, and this is particularly true of the character Justine. The narrator Darley’s memories of Justine moving through the streets of the city evoke her in the guise of a flâneuse and this flânerie, I go on to suggest, establishes a symbiosis between herself and the city, setting up an interplay through which Justine becomes the proxy for the city as unhomely home.https://literator.org.za/index.php/literator/article/view/1165
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Allyson Kreuiter
spellingShingle Allyson Kreuiter
The flâneuse and the City as uncanny home in Lawrence Durrell’s <i>The Alexandria quartet</i>
Literator
author_facet Allyson Kreuiter
author_sort Allyson Kreuiter
title The flâneuse and the City as uncanny home in Lawrence Durrell’s <i>The Alexandria quartet</i>
title_short The flâneuse and the City as uncanny home in Lawrence Durrell’s <i>The Alexandria quartet</i>
title_full The flâneuse and the City as uncanny home in Lawrence Durrell’s <i>The Alexandria quartet</i>
title_fullStr The flâneuse and the City as uncanny home in Lawrence Durrell’s <i>The Alexandria quartet</i>
title_full_unstemmed The flâneuse and the City as uncanny home in Lawrence Durrell’s <i>The Alexandria quartet</i>
title_sort flâneuse and the city as uncanny home in lawrence durrell’s <i>the alexandria quartet</i>
publisher AOSIS
series Literator
issn 0258-2279
2219-8237
publishDate 2015-07-01
description The concept of the home is not something that can be readily associated with Lawrence Durrell’s The Alexandria quartet. Generally, the word home is defined as a place where one lives, a house or dwelling. The idea of home is associated with the architectural construct of the house, as both a place and a space. With this in mind, I approach the conceptualisation of the house as representative of safety and happy remembrance from a somewhat different premise, exploring Durrell’s representation of Alexandria as an enclosing womb-like home that voraciously consumes her inhabitants. Although Durrell’s Alexandria has been considered by scholars from many angles, I propose my position represents a rather different approach to the manner in which the city has previously been examined. Durrell’s city, as uncanny home, will be shown to create her residents as fragments of her own consciousness, and this is particularly true of the character Justine. The narrator Darley’s memories of Justine moving through the streets of the city evoke her in the guise of a flâneuse and this flânerie, I go on to suggest, establishes a symbiosis between herself and the city, setting up an interplay through which Justine becomes the proxy for the city as unhomely home.
url https://literator.org.za/index.php/literator/article/view/1165
work_keys_str_mv AT allysonkreuiter theflaneuseandthecityasuncannyhomeinlawrencedurrellsithealexandriaquarteti
AT allysonkreuiter flaneuseandthecityasuncannyhomeinlawrencedurrellsithealexandriaquarteti
_version_ 1725659965406838784