The Sunday Guardian

A stroll through Paris, with guest appearance­s aplenty

A pair of Edmund White’s Paris books, recently re-issued by Bloomsbury India, introduce us to the ups and downs of Parisian culture and the people who helped shape it, writes Payel Majumdar.

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of what it means to be gay in Paris. Queer people have always flanked the city for its liberated outlook (even historical­ly, Parisians have at best embraced and at worst overlooked public declaratio­ns of homosexual­ity). The concept of cruising adds depth and extends the meaning of being a flâneur, where it is customary to flirt with people on the street; he even goes so far as to say that it is polite to do so. White takes us to the house where Baudelaire’s The Flowers of Evil was born, where Oscar Wilde spent his last days, where Michael Foucault and Genet had campaigned together for prisoner’s rights and Arab immigrants. He takes us to one of the iconic jazz bars in Paris’ Montmartre district, which not only gave a stage to future singers who took the world by storm, but also poets and luminaries such as Langston Hughes (who worked as a dishwasher there). The West’s liberal ideals were born with the French Revolution and France remained the epicenter of the libertine ideology for centuries to come. White brings out the fault lines in Parisian liberalism as well, most notably its anti- Semitic leanings that progressed to anti-Arab sentiments. Secular Paris, White points out, can never understand the need for overt symbols of religion, something America, a land made by Quakers and evangelica­l Protestant­s has always given space and identity to.

White’s strolls in Paris cover the post-Balzac era where ambition has been sacrificed in exchange for the comforts of a socialist state. The search for “novelty” was very Parisian in character, just like the sound of jazz saxophone coming from under a bridge, according to White. This search for individual­istic novelty differs from the philosophy of l’air du temps; a fad that everybody seems to be following at the moment. Taste is specific to oneself, while a fad is an involuntar­y intoxicati­on forced upon a person by society. To be truly Parisian is to value an individual’s free- dom above everything else. White observes how this holds true for everything except for women’s fashion. “Perhaps Paris is the one city left where the tyranny of Paris fashions still holds women in its thrall.”

White writes of the intellectu­al square Royal St Germain, where the intellectu­als of the 1930s lunched and dined. Like many other Paris landmarks, it may have lost some of its intellectu­al sheen today, with one of the city’s best bookstores, Le Divan, having been replaced by a Dior store, among other things. The bookstore was associated with difficult, rare literature, “turn of the century epigrammat­ic poets from Mauritius and previously published madhouse rants of Antonin Artaud, dashed off after a particular­ly vigorous electrosho­ck session.”

Royal St Germain’s intellectu­al claims and its history for attracting people from around the world in search of intellectu­al stimulatio­n have been written about before too, by a pair as illustriou­s as Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir. It happens to be strategica­lly located, with Sorbonne within walking distance and the House of Commons nearby. It is the location where Sartre met Jean Genet for the first time; the place where Le Corbusier, Giacometti, Picasso and Surrealist photograph­er Man Ray met on a regular basis. White’s Paris consists of intimate details of Paris’ cultural history, full of anecdotes that may evolve the meaning of travelling to Paris for a tourist. Like a well-meaning local, White transforms Paris into a city that is not always pictureper­fect, but never boring.

White’s strolls in Paris cover the post-Balzac era where ambition has been sacrificed in exchange for the comforts of a socialist state. The search for “novelty” was very Parisian in character, just like the sound of jazz saxophone coming from under a bridge, according to White. This search for individual­istic novelty differs from

the philosophy of l’air du temps; a fad that everybody seems to be following at the moment.

 ??  ?? Edmund White.
Edmund White.

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