Article

Running across the Rooves of Empire: Parkour and the Postcolonial City

Details

Citation

Marshall B (2010) Running across the Rooves of Empire: Parkour and the Postcolonial City. Modern and Contemporary France, 18 (2), pp. 157-173. https://doi.org/10.1080/09639481003714872

Abstract
This article takes a common strand of space and power, mediated by comparative notions of empire and its memory. It focuses initially on Quebec City, discussing the relations there between topography and power, in the socio-spatial, including imagined, arrangements that pertain to the division between upper and lower towns, tourist/administrative core and banlieue, as well as the original tension between the administrated city and the vast North American – and native - hinterland. These relations have persisted and adapted in the contexts of the first French empire and its replacement by the British, and in the contemporary city, which in some ways can be seen as on the periphery of the American empire. The central text discussed is a 1998 novel by Pierre Gobeil, Sur le toit des maisons, in which two disaffected young men journey from the lower town to the river by climbing across the rooves of the city. The second half of the article links this to the phenomenon of parkour, in which 'free-runners' trace alternative pathways through urban space and which originated in the Paris banlieue. Discussion of parkour centres on Michel de Certeau's alternative mappings of the city, but the argument here also invokes embedded, imagined histories and memories of colonial space, and the problem of narrative representation and its ideological resolutions, emphasising the ambivalent tensions in the phenomenon, and in de Certeau, between order and resistance. The colonial dimension is manifest not only in the parallels of policing and social apartheid which persist in the French banlieues, but even in official recuperation of the parkour phenomenon in, the action films Yamakasi and Banlieue 13, which dramatise these contradictions and memories. The article thus alludes to both the first and second French empires, as well as to the role of differently lived francophone histories in the formation of youth narratives and subcultures.

Keywords
Quebec; France; United States Civilization French influences; New France Civilization

Journal
Modern and Contemporary France: Volume 18, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date31/05/2010
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/2835
PublisherTaylor & Francis (Routledge)
ISSN0963-9489