"A sensitive walk up any High Street is a Pilgrim's Progress" Phil Smith - playwright, walk-performance artist and author (Mythogeography and Counter-Tourism) - recently retraced W.G. Sebald's famous 'Rings of Saturn' walk round East Anglia. At one level On Walking describes this blistered walk from one incongruous B&B to the next, taking in places like Dunwich, Bungay, Covehithe, Orford Ness, Sutton Hoo and Rendlesham Forest - with their lost villages, Cold War testing sites, black dogs, white deer and alien trails. Phil Smith's walk soon becomes every bit as remarkable as Sebald's and he matches Sebald's erudition, originality and humour swathe for swathe. At a second level, the book sets out a unique kind of 'hyper-sensitised' walking for which the author is quietly famous. It burrows beneath the guidebook and the map, looks beyond the shopfront and Tudor facade and feels beneath the blisters and aches of the everyday. The Suffolk walk described here is an exemplary walk that goes beyond 'wandering around looking at stuff' and shows how every walk can be art, revolution and pilgrimage. At a third level, On Walking is an intellectual tour de force, encompassing Situationism, alchemy, dancing, jouissance, geology, psychogeography, 20th century cinema and old TV, architecture, grief, pilgrimage, WWII, the Cold War, Uzumaki, pub conversations, somatics and synchronicity.
On Walking : - And Stalking Sebald
Description
Table of Contents
Who me? Superstitions What I do when I walk My Sebald walk: Taken from my notebooks Walking bodies actics of sensitivity Knees Crab Man's razor Don't take your own food A skill... A few ighlights from other drifts and wanders (1) Encounters Democracy O my International Lettristes! O my Situationists! Getting started Scratching from start Mythogeography Jouissance Environmentalism Pilgrimage Dodgy Walk in the footsteps of others Being ready Leaderless Holey actics and things Deep topography Autotopography Cemetery Walk (2003) Walking in the Suburbs (2013) Doppel A few ighlights from other drifts and wanders (2) Cryptic Coincidences Note The wobbly art of memory Holey space Follow animal tracks Bluster The right to more Rhythms Psychogeography Walk to the ends of the earth Atmospheres Alchemical crossing Walking in character Undercovers Walking as an ordeal The man in the mask Women and walking Re:enactment Urfaces A few highlights from other drifts and wanders (3) A few highlights from other drifts and wanders (4) The fire doors of perception The last tactic Appendix Walking for a change: A manifesto for a new nomad References
Author Description
Dr Phil Smith (also known as CrabMan, Anton Vagus and Mytho) has claws in several different worlds. One, large and wide, is in performance and music theatre [he has written more than 100 plays for companies including St Petersburg State Comedy Theatre, Opera North and Perpetual Motion, and he is dramaturg with TNT (Munich)]. From site-specific performances in South Devon beach huts, lidos, tea shops and other unconventional settings, to mis-guides in National Trust properties, to counter-tours and drifts in city streets, Phil Smith has long practised what he preaches in this book. He is a visiting lecturer at the University of Exeter and at the University of Plymouth. He is also one of four core member of a group of artist-researchers called Wrights and Sites, who have generated a range of mis-guides, performances, possible cities and forests and other wonders.