Copyright Intellect Ltd 2017
Not for distribution
13
JUCS 4 (1+2) pp. 13–29 Intellect Limited 2017
Journal of Urban Cultural Studies
Volume 4 Numbers 1 & 2
© 2017 Intellect Ltd Article. English language. doi: 10.1386/jucs.4.1-2.13_1
KEYWORDS
Cesário Verde
Lisbon
the flâneur
Charles Baudelaire
nineteenth-century
poetry
Pharmakon
Jacques Derrida
CHARLES RICE-DAVIS
University of Central Oklahoma
Pharmakopolis: Cesário
Verde’s Lisbon
ABSTRACT
Through the example of the Portuguese poet Cesário Verde (1855–86), this article
interrogates the relationship between the space of the nineteenth-century European
capital city and the literary figure of the flâneur. Specifically, it considers in the first
place the role of this aimless, noctambulist observer in a city (Lisbon) that differs
in numerous ways from the better-studied locales of Paris and London. Second, it
argues for an expansion of the understanding of the flâneur as passed down since
Walter Benjamin’s reading of Baudelaire. Specifically, Cesário, owing both to his
career as a physician and to his extremely understated, self-effacing poetic style,
allows readers to glimpse the otherwise unnoticed psychological and physiologi-
cal effects of the wandering, nocturnal observations that characterize the flâneur
genre. Using Jacques Derrida’s concept of the pharmakon, a drug that both cures
and poisons, this article makes the case that the flâneur, rather than potentially
subversive optic for social observation, represents instead an unending, constrain-
ing and addictive practice that is dictated by the very social and technological forces
that enable his noctambulism. In this light, the otherwise free-wheeling and plotless
text of the flâneur can instead by read as a narrative of capture, confinement and
obligation.
At what point, over the course of reading a certain type of literature of the city,
that of the aimless, somnambulist flâneur, does the reader lose the expectation
that something will ‘happen?’ At what point, in creating this literature, does
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
02_JUCS 4.1&2_Davis_13-29.indd 13 7/19/17 4:11 PM