-
Psychogeography is the
exploration of
urban environments that
emphasizes interpersonal connections to
places and
arbitrary routes. It was
developed by...
- of his work is
rooted in London,
recently within the
influences of
psychogeography.
Sinclair was born in Cardiff, Wales, on 11 June 1943. From 1956 to...
-
Psychogeography is a 2007 book
written by Will Self and
illustrated by
Ralph Steadman. The book is
centred on a
collection of some of the
articles written...
- German-American
psychoanalyst and a
pioneer in the
scholarly field of
psychogeography.
William Guglielmo Niederland was born in Schippenbeil, East Prussia...
-
artistic focus;
emphasis was
placed on
concepts like
unitary urbanism and
psychogeography. Gradually, however, that
focus shifted more
towards revolutionary...
- London: The Biography, and Iain Sinclair, who
writes in the
genre of
psychogeography. In the 1940s,
George Orwell wrote essays in the
London Evening Standard...
- Age
ideas in the 1960s. Watkins'
ideas also
influenced contemporary psychogeography,
including Iain Sinclair's Lud Heat (1975),
which in turn influenced...
- conclusions. The dérive's
goals include studying the
terrain of the city (
psychogeography) and
emotional disorientation, both of
which lead to the potential...
-
Professor of
Modern Thought at
Brunel University London,
where he
teaches psychogeography. His 2002
novel Dorian, an
Imitation was
longlisted for the Booker...
- made the
pattern up."
Coined by the
French Situationist Guy Debord,
psychogeography originally referred to
practices intended to
expose the "urban geography...