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flâneur
![Gustav Wunderwald’s Paintings of Weimar Berlin](https://the-public-domain-review.imgix.net/essays/gustav-wunderwalds-paintings-of-weimar-berlin/34947284166_915884997f_c.jpg?w=600&h=1200&auto=format,compress)
Gustav Wunderwald’s Paintings of Weimar Berlin
The Berlin of the 1920s is often associated with a certain image of excess and decadence, but it was a quite different side of the city — the sobriety and desolation of its industrial and working-class districts — which came to obsess the painter Gustav Wunderwald. Mark Hobbs explores. more
![Rambling Reflections: On Summers in Switzerland and Sheffield](https://the-public-domain-review.imgix.net/essays/rambling-reflections-on-summers-in-switzerland-and-sheffield/stpetersisland.jpg?w=600&h=1200&auto=format,compress)
Rambling Reflections: On Summers in Switzerland and Sheffield
In the footsteps of Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Karl Philipp Moritz — from the peace of Lake Biel to the rugged Peaks — Seán Williams considers the connection between walking and writing. more
![“Fevers of Curiosity”: Charles Baudelaire and the Convalescent *Flâneur*](https://the-public-domain-review.imgix.net/essays/charles-baudelaire-and-the-convalescent-flaneur/baudelaire-featured.jpg?w=600&h=1200&auto=format,compress)
“Fevers of Curiosity”: Charles Baudelaire and the Convalescent Flâneur
This month marks the 200th anniversary of Charles Baudelaire’s birth, the French poet famous for his descriptions of the flâneur: a man of the crowd, who thrived in the metropolis’ multitude. Following Baudelaire through 19th-century Paris, Matthew Beaumont discovers a parallel archetype — the convalescent hero of modernity — who emerges from the sickbed into city streets with a feverish curiosity. more