Michael De Certeau (1984) introduces the rhetoric of walking by observing Manhattan from the 110th floor of the World Trade Centre by approaching the city as a human text. He claims that totalizing this text in the eye without analyzing closely and without experiencing it is isolation and distancing from life. Certeau (1984) rejects this Panopticon look by urging the necessity of walking on the narrow streets of the city to have unique analyses like free voyage of the reader on the lines of the text. The voyeurs must come down and just jump onto the streets freely to become walkers and readers must be born on the text after the death of author as Roland Barthess (1967) suggests. Only then, the variety of voices created by innumerable walker...
International audienceCities are built around the sense of sight, for those who can see. Since the X...
When Michel de Certeau asserts that walking manipulates spatial organizations, he is clearly employi...
This paper explores the imaginative and analytical potential of ‘journeys’ in understanding the fabr...
This paper concentrates on an eminently urban phenomenon, with the accent on urban. The phenomenon ...
PERHAPS THE most famous and most reproduced piece of writingfrom Michel de Certeau’s many works – an...
In his influential essay ‘Walking in the City’, Michel de Certeau contrasts the practice of walking ...
Writing in 1984 (a year ominously intertwined with Orwellian prophecy) French cultural theorist Mich...
General aim of the article is to show city in Julian Tuwim’s poetry oppositely to older perspectives...
The rise of global cities like London, Paris, and New York in the 19th century marked the arrival of...
The past decades saw the rise of the literary walk throughout Europe. Like all walking-tours ‘in the...
The ordinary practitioners of the city live “down below”, below the thresholds at which visibility b...
The Invisible City explores urban spaces from the perspective of a traveller, writer, and creator of...
WALKING CITIES: LONDON explores how the temporal and spatial realities experienced through urban wal...
What happens when one moves about in the city? In this essay I will explore how we through our movem...
Reading a literary text means placing it in a context and constructing a meaning. It implies inserti...
International audienceCities are built around the sense of sight, for those who can see. Since the X...
When Michel de Certeau asserts that walking manipulates spatial organizations, he is clearly employi...
This paper explores the imaginative and analytical potential of ‘journeys’ in understanding the fabr...
This paper concentrates on an eminently urban phenomenon, with the accent on urban. The phenomenon ...
PERHAPS THE most famous and most reproduced piece of writingfrom Michel de Certeau’s many works – an...
In his influential essay ‘Walking in the City’, Michel de Certeau contrasts the practice of walking ...
Writing in 1984 (a year ominously intertwined with Orwellian prophecy) French cultural theorist Mich...
General aim of the article is to show city in Julian Tuwim’s poetry oppositely to older perspectives...
The rise of global cities like London, Paris, and New York in the 19th century marked the arrival of...
The past decades saw the rise of the literary walk throughout Europe. Like all walking-tours ‘in the...
The ordinary practitioners of the city live “down below”, below the thresholds at which visibility b...
The Invisible City explores urban spaces from the perspective of a traveller, writer, and creator of...
WALKING CITIES: LONDON explores how the temporal and spatial realities experienced through urban wal...
What happens when one moves about in the city? In this essay I will explore how we through our movem...
Reading a literary text means placing it in a context and constructing a meaning. It implies inserti...
International audienceCities are built around the sense of sight, for those who can see. Since the X...
When Michel de Certeau asserts that walking manipulates spatial organizations, he is clearly employi...
This paper explores the imaginative and analytical potential of ‘journeys’ in understanding the fabr...