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" The observer is a prince who, wearing a disguise, takes pleasure everywhere.

That eminently Parisian compromise between laziness and activity known as flanerie.

Americans are particularly ill-suited to be flaneurs. They are always driven by the urge towards self-improvement.

In New York you can tell by people's body language that no one cares what other people think of them, whereas in Paris everyone is judging everyone and the only people who have this American-style insouciance are the insane. "

Edmund White , The Flaneur: A Stroll through the Paradoxes of Paris


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Edmund White quote : The observer is a prince who, wearing a disguise, takes pleasure everywhere.<br /><br />That eminently Parisian compromise between laziness and activity known as flanerie.<br /><br />Americans are particularly ill-suited to be flaneurs. They are always driven by the urge towards self-improvement.<br /><br />In New York you can tell by people's body language that no one cares what other people think of them, whereas in Paris everyone is judging everyone and the only people who have this American-style insouciance are the insane.