Psychogeography

Key Word: Psychogeography
There are about ten songs I repeat in my mind, which Iâm not sure make them my favorites, but nonetheless, one of their lyrics is: âI got tired of living with depression so I went for a little walkâ (âHands in the Dirtâ 2011). This punchy song is a young adultâs Southern reckoning with a loss of thrill. And itâs practical. The instructions are a how-to for coping with grownup sadness. After your walk, if all else fails, âstick your hands in the dirt.â
My mom used to leave the house for an hour each evening when we were old enough to bath ourselves and walk in the darkness of the neighborhood. I became a walker shortly after. I continually choose to walk alone over rotting leaves and through foreign cities to peek at the unknown.
Mama (2019)
If you keep walking, eventually youâll end up far from where you started. This is when psychogeography takes hold, because youâve changed, and the land saw it happen.
Psychogeography is coined an âart termâ by the Tate in London: â[It] describes the effect of a geographical location on the emotions and behaviors of individualsâ (âPsychogeographyâ). When I first heard this term, I had no idea what the internet had concurred to define it as, but my gut immediately knew. Something important is in this name because Iâve felt it my whole life. In our human bodies we have operated with-by-through psychogeography to write origin stories, fulfill desire, and ultimately glimpse âhome.â Everyone has.
Guy Debord christened psychogeography (1955) via his avant-garde background of Marxist theoretical systems: âPhilosophy must become realityâ (qtd. in Chambre and McLellan). He credits land as an ultimate reality as a start for the environmental justice-combination. That 1960âs name might yet bring âclimate changeâ down from lofty politics and back to the moral space. âEnvironmental justice!â is a cry by BIPOC communities, from a deep respect for psychogeography: Americaâs most polluted environments are intentionally established in areas where people of color and the poor live and walk.
Inspired by the concept of the flâneur, an apolitical observer of modern life (Charles Baudelaire, 1863; âthis wanderer of the city, chronicler of the present, and contradiction-laden figure of the crowd, has always been a mythâ(qtd. in Livingstone and Gyarkye)), Debord emphasizes the importance of play (âdriftingâ) when attempting a âless-functionalâ navigation of modern architecture and spaces. He writes, âreflective nostalgia is a form of deep mourning that performs a labor of grief both through pondering pain and through play that points to the futureâ (qtd. in Boym 54). He was a founding member for Situationist International (1957) which organized creatives who longed to engineer radically different situations in opposition to culture, to expose previously unrecognized forces of homogeneity. Walking is one of the first things they could agreed upon as a revolutionary action. He writes that, âactivities like walking the city aimlessly were reimagined as statements against a society that demanded production, and maps were cut up and reassembled to facilitate wanderingâ(âSituationist Internationalâ).
With this history in mind, I understand psychogeography as a reconciliation. To the absurd, to the exhausting, to the places our food comes from, to the quiet, to the uncontrolled, to the other stories, to ââŚthe possibility of hidden patterns, patterns that, if unearthed and understood, would somehow explain me -my life- to myselfâ(Birkerts 5). Walking takes us away from the noise of stories weâve always heard so that we can remember what weâve always known. As Debord writes, âone becomes aware of the collective frameworks of memories when one distances oneself from oneâs communityâŚ. Collective frameworks of memory are rediscovered in mourningâ (qtd. in Boym 55). When reconciling with alternative narratives of living, simultaneously one is distanced from a previous reality: a continual cycle of loss. So we keep walking.
Loss is not necessarily an automatic trigger for sadness. Sally Mann writes, âultimate beauty requires that sweet edge of decay, just as our casually possessed lives are made more precious by a whiff of the abyssâ (Hold Still). Walking towards a deep, futuristic horizon is putting a finger on the source for why weâre sad. Theorist Ann Cvetkovich argues, âinvestigating public âepidemics of depressionâ recognizes long-term histories of violence tied to colonization and power and might offer ways to âcome to terms with disappointment, failure, and the slowness of changeâ in response. Such negative emotions might sometimes be antisocial, but they may also serve to catalyze creative forms of affiliation or relationalityâ (qtd. in Cohen 72). It is normal to think with our bodies. Our physical bodies can translate abstract heritages of violence in ways that feel too distant for cognition. In walking, I activate my body knowledges and simultaneously, reorient myself to notice the other stories on the land: As Sara Ahmed puts it, âdepending on which way one turns, different worlds might even come into view. If such turns are repeated over time, then bodies acquire the very shape of such directionâ (qtd. in Rifkin 2). A thought paradigm of moving and listening to bodies could work its way down to our feet, to remind us that our feet are on the ground, that we are never disconnected from this soil. Our responsibility to seek justice for the earth systems is referenced by these walking-feet.
Noticing the effects of psychogeography is never an unbiased or neutral experience. Walking and processing psychogeography is a methodology for reexamining perspective: As Claire Atherton writes, âhistory haunts landscapes to become a part of our gazeâ (âLiving Matterâ). Or as Kathryn Yusoff writes, âlooked at through the lends of geography and slavery, the descriptive opacity of the Anthropocene as a reckoning with geologic relations seems disingenuousâ (âThe Inhumanitiesâ). Walking can be a beginning. The psychogeographic reimagining of space is kin to Dada and Surrealism because it depends on the subconscious and its capabilities to alter our perspectives. Our subconscious humbles us, as does walking, and I think this is a mighty combination for making displacement from land and ecologic relation (ours and alternative histories) intelligible.
I am interested in the future of thinking. As a globe, processing histories of colonialism and pain, walking is a labor that enhances our thinking into the depths of our bodies. This holistic thinking mends loss while causing it and if the loss of uniformity, popular stories, comfort, and understanding donât freeze us, the reply of movement starts âa future.â Environmental justice is a horizon that urges us to keep walking, to come closer.
References
Atherton, Claire. âLiving Matter.â Bomb Magazine, September 2019, vol. 148. Retrieved March 2021.
Birkerts, Sven. The Art of Time in Memoir: Then, Again. Minneapolis: Graywolf Press, 2007.
Boym, Svetlana. The Future of Nostalgia. New York: Basic Books, 2001.
Chambre, Henri, and McLellan, David T. âMarxism.â Britannica. Retrieved March 2021.
Cohen, Brianne. âTowards a feeling of animacy: Art, ecology, and the public sphere in Vietnam.â Afterimage, Vol. 47, no. 3, pp 66-90. 2020.
Livingstone, Jo, and Gyarkye, Lovia. âDeath to the Flaneur.â The New Republic. Retrieved March 2017.
Mann, Sally. Hold Still. New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2015.
âP˛â˛őłŚłó´Ç˛ľąđ´Ç˛ľ°ů˛šąčłó˛â.â The Tate London. Retrieved March 2021.Â
Rifkin, Mark. Beyond Settler Time: Temporal Sovereignty and Indigenous Self-Determination. Duke University Press, 2017.
âSituationist International.â The Art Story. Retrieved March 2021.
Yusoff, Kathryn. A Billion Black Anthropocenes or None. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2018.