A list of city names is enough to evoke the wonder of travel. “Trieste, Zurich, Paris.”—the closing line of James Joyce’s classic Ulysses—provides, as Alain de Botton writes, a record of the book’s production and the cosmopolitanism it grew out of. “Cairo, Bombay, Shanghai” traces other passages, trade routes perhaps or the wandering imagination of oriental fantasies similar to those that run through “Rome, Jerusalem, Mecca.” Thus listed, cities act like nodes along longer lines of travel. While some networks forge the outlines of territory, others trace less grounded modes of connection. The itineraries of travel, scribbled on parchment, etched in stone, or uploaded online, simply serve to recall journeys between places and the connections...
Travel is a spatial practice that has been at the heart of geography. In its earliest origins geogr...
ce texte est issu d'une présentation faite au Deutsche Historikertag 2006, dans une session co organ...
Michael De Certeau (1984) introduces the rhetoric of walking by observing Manhattan from the 110th f...
A list of city names is enough to evoke the wonder of travel. “Trieste, Zurich, Paris.”—the closing ...
The past decades saw the rise of the literary walk throughout Europe. Like all walking-tours ‘in the...
This paper explores the imaginative and analytical potential of ‘journeys’ in understanding the fabr...
Through a study of mapping comes an understanding of urbanism and its development through history. T...
THESIS 8659My thesis examines the development of an imaginative geography of urban space through the...
“You are walking through it howsomever. I am, a stride at a time. A very short space of time through...
In Divisible Cities takes Italo Calvino’s classic re-imagining of Venice, viewed in the mind’s eye f...
City, as an active and dynamic organism, a literary mapping of a metropolitan consciousness and a si...
We are accustomed to reading modernist works in the light of actual cities, glossing literary settin...
International audienceTravel narratives generally include spatial notations. These notations are fre...
The Invisible City explores urban spaces from the perspective of a traveller, writer, and creator of...
Bearing in mind the central place of literary, academic, and religious tourism in Cultural Studies a...
Travel is a spatial practice that has been at the heart of geography. In its earliest origins geogr...
ce texte est issu d'une présentation faite au Deutsche Historikertag 2006, dans une session co organ...
Michael De Certeau (1984) introduces the rhetoric of walking by observing Manhattan from the 110th f...
A list of city names is enough to evoke the wonder of travel. “Trieste, Zurich, Paris.”—the closing ...
The past decades saw the rise of the literary walk throughout Europe. Like all walking-tours ‘in the...
This paper explores the imaginative and analytical potential of ‘journeys’ in understanding the fabr...
Through a study of mapping comes an understanding of urbanism and its development through history. T...
THESIS 8659My thesis examines the development of an imaginative geography of urban space through the...
“You are walking through it howsomever. I am, a stride at a time. A very short space of time through...
In Divisible Cities takes Italo Calvino’s classic re-imagining of Venice, viewed in the mind’s eye f...
City, as an active and dynamic organism, a literary mapping of a metropolitan consciousness and a si...
We are accustomed to reading modernist works in the light of actual cities, glossing literary settin...
International audienceTravel narratives generally include spatial notations. These notations are fre...
The Invisible City explores urban spaces from the perspective of a traveller, writer, and creator of...
Bearing in mind the central place of literary, academic, and religious tourism in Cultural Studies a...
Travel is a spatial practice that has been at the heart of geography. In its earliest origins geogr...
ce texte est issu d'une présentation faite au Deutsche Historikertag 2006, dans une session co organ...
Michael De Certeau (1984) introduces the rhetoric of walking by observing Manhattan from the 110th f...