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dust_and_shadow:walking_exercises [2019-08-30 10:20] majadust_and_shadow:walking_exercises [2019-08-30 10:21] maja
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 **Reflections:** What differences did you notice between the lines and squiggle walking? How did your body, mind, attention, or awareness of the landscape change? Draw how your walks feel and write down your observations.  **Reflections:** What differences did you notice between the lines and squiggle walking? How did your body, mind, attention, or awareness of the landscape change? Draw how your walks feel and write down your observations. 
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 +**Further information:** Lines and squiggles have associations with the desert Southwest. Native Americans did some farming but many tribes were also seasonally semi-nomadic for hunting, harvesting, and climate purposes. When Americans from the East entered the terrain, there were two prominent groups: cattlemen who let their animals wander and graze and farmers along with town folk who divided property more akin to a grid system. Many of the tensions in the West had to do with expectations of being able to wander versus expectations of grid-like farming and property settlement. You might think too of the lines and squiggles of the Southwest from straight lined state boundaries and highways to wandering lines of geographic terrain. 
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-**Further information:** Lines and squiggles have associations with the desert Southwest. Native Americans did some farming but many tribes were also seasonally semi-nomadic for hunting, harvesting, and climate purposes. When Americans from the East entered the terrain, there were two prominent groups: cattlemen who let their animals wander and graze and farmers along with town folk who divided property more akin to a grid system. Many of the tensions in the West had to do with expectations of being able to wander versus expectations of grid-like farming and property settlement. You might think too of the lines and squiggles of the Southwest from straight lined state boundaries and highways to wandering lines of geographic terrain.  
  
 <blockquote>One of the things that the 19th century has taught me is that you can’t dream for justice, you can’t dream for reconciliation, you can’t dream for any kind of resolution in the future. That kind of teleological view towards the future is not a very helpful one. It’s much more useful to think about it in terms of present-day energies. <blockquote>One of the things that the 19th century has taught me is that you can’t dream for justice, you can’t dream for reconciliation, you can’t dream for any kind of resolution in the future. That kind of teleological view towards the future is not a very helpful one. It’s much more useful to think about it in terms of present-day energies.
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 For more on walking as an art at the Museum of Walking http://www.museumofwalking.org/ and Rebecca Solnit’s Wanderlust: A History of Walking.  For a definitive history of late 19th and early 20th century conflicts in the West, see The Earth is Weeping: the Epic Story of the Indian Wars by Peter Cozzens.  For more on walking as an art at the Museum of Walking http://www.museumofwalking.org/ and Rebecca Solnit’s Wanderlust: A History of Walking.  For a definitive history of late 19th and early 20th century conflicts in the West, see The Earth is Weeping: the Epic Story of the Indian Wars by Peter Cozzens. 
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  • dust_and_shadow/walking_exercises.txt
  • Last modified: 2019-09-10 08:33
  • by maja