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Walking Through Countryside’s Forgotten Colonial Histories Tickets, Tue, Sep 24, 2024 at 1:00 PM | Eventbrite

Join us to explore walking as a methodology to the entanglement between rural landscapes and colonialism.Walking Through Countryside’s Forgotten Colonial Histories Tickets, Tue, Sep 24, 2024 at 1:00 PM | Eventbrite

Curated news

The Art of Walking – ASAP/Review

Source: The Art of Walking – ASAP/Review

Curated news

These 6 U.S. cities will have new pedestrian zones in 2026 – Fast Company

Half a dozen U.S. cities, including Detroit and Houston, will permanently reduce or remove car traffic on some of their streets. Source: These 6 U.S. cities will have new pedestrian zones in 2026 – Fast Company

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Rock up to London: discovering stones and fossils from around the world on an urban geology tour | London holidays | The Guardian

The city’s architecture travels through time and continents, incorporating everything from slabs of the Italian Alps to meteorites that hit southern Africa 2bn years ago Source: Rock up to London: discovering stones and fossils from around the world on an urban geology tour | London holidays | The Guardian

You Are [Always] in Native Space: Grappling with Legacies of Colonization Through Sound – Art Journal Open

A collaboration between a tribal elder and an artist descended from first colonizers

Source: You Are [Always] in Native Space: Grappling with Legacies of Colonization Through Sound – Art Journal Open

Submitted by: Babak Fakhamzadeh

pedestrian acts

By de Certeau: In “Walking in the City”, de Certeau conceives pedestrianism as a practice that is performed in the public space, whose architecture and behavioural habits substantially determine the way we walk. For de Certeau, the spatial order “organises an ensemble of possibilities (e.g. by a place in which one can move) and interdictions (e.g. by a wall that prevents one from going further)” and the walker “actualises some of these possibilities” by performing within its rules and limitations. “In that way,” says de Certeau, “he makes them exist as well as emerge.” Thus, pedestrians, as they walk conforming to the possibilities that are brought about by the spatial order of the city, constantly repeat and re-produce that spatial order, in a way ensuring its continuity. But, a pedestrian could also invent other possibilities. According to de Certeau, “the crossing, drifting away, or improvisation of walking privilege, transform or abandon spatial elements.” Hence, the pedestrians could, to a certain extent, elude the discipline of the spatial order of the city. Instead of repeating and re-producing the possibilities that are allowed, they can deviate, digress, drift away, depart, contravene, disrupt, subvert, or resist them. These acts, as he calls them, are pedestrian acts.

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