An understanding of the geographies of resistance benefits from an exploration of alternative geographical imaginations. A focus on the London based counter-culture of the 1960s illustrates this point. The oppositional geographies of the counter-culture can be mapped using the London underground press as both source and object. In doing so, the underground’s peculiar constructions of the relationships between nature, technology and humanity can be traced. The (‘new’) leftist movements of the 1960s are not of primary interest here. Rather, the less conventional forms of cultural politicking from that period are the focus. Factions who were engaged in a range of activities, from the seemingly esoteric production of light-shows, through the ‘w...
The aim of this thesis is to explore the relationship between the New Left and modernisation, and to...
Exhibition at LCC as part of the London Design Festival Alternative do-it-yourself (DIY) publishi...
In 1997 the creation of a virtual underground was somehow a bizarre idea that the author attempted t...
Whatever perspective one takes, contradictions in the relationship between the capital and the provi...
This book works with two contrasting imaginings of 1960s London: the one of the excess and comic vac...
In London Underground: A Cultural Geography, David Ashford sets out to chart one of the strangest, a...
In the years around 1968 London was home to a sizeable community of writers, musicians, artists, and...
The processes of modernisation that re-capitalised London in the post-war period can be located in b...
My thesis is both an oppositional history and a (re)definition of British Underground Cinema culture...
The relationship between Detroit's underground presses---which included The Fifth Estate, Creem, Su...
In basements, dingy backrooms, warehouses, and other neglected places around the world music is bein...
Taking the metaphor of mapping forward, this paper presented recent chartings, research developed as...
The Nowhere Machine is a cultural history of the London Underground from 1860-2007. Offering an alte...
It is in the experiments in the arts, media, culture, politics and everyday practices developed by t...
This book examines how the visionary creative ideas of avant-garde and resistant groups, represented...
The aim of this thesis is to explore the relationship between the New Left and modernisation, and to...
Exhibition at LCC as part of the London Design Festival Alternative do-it-yourself (DIY) publishi...
In 1997 the creation of a virtual underground was somehow a bizarre idea that the author attempted t...
Whatever perspective one takes, contradictions in the relationship between the capital and the provi...
This book works with two contrasting imaginings of 1960s London: the one of the excess and comic vac...
In London Underground: A Cultural Geography, David Ashford sets out to chart one of the strangest, a...
In the years around 1968 London was home to a sizeable community of writers, musicians, artists, and...
The processes of modernisation that re-capitalised London in the post-war period can be located in b...
My thesis is both an oppositional history and a (re)definition of British Underground Cinema culture...
The relationship between Detroit's underground presses---which included The Fifth Estate, Creem, Su...
In basements, dingy backrooms, warehouses, and other neglected places around the world music is bein...
Taking the metaphor of mapping forward, this paper presented recent chartings, research developed as...
The Nowhere Machine is a cultural history of the London Underground from 1860-2007. Offering an alte...
It is in the experiments in the arts, media, culture, politics and everyday practices developed by t...
This book examines how the visionary creative ideas of avant-garde and resistant groups, represented...
The aim of this thesis is to explore the relationship between the New Left and modernisation, and to...
Exhibition at LCC as part of the London Design Festival Alternative do-it-yourself (DIY) publishi...
In 1997 the creation of a virtual underground was somehow a bizarre idea that the author attempted t...