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Both sides previous revision Previous revision Next revision | Previous revision Next revisionBoth sides next revision | ||
two_legged_research [2021-10-08 09:32] – [title] 2a02:a210:523:7c00:a8b0:e94c:f50a:7178 | two_legged_research [2021-10-13 08:40] – [title] cocky | ||
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introduction course | introduction course | ||
The Walking Seminar. Embodied Research Methodologies in emergent Anthropocene Landscapes https:// | The Walking Seminar. Embodied Research Methodologies in emergent Anthropocene Landscapes https:// | ||
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+ | what walking means in cultural history: | ||
+ | * Homeric bards, old wanderers for whom walking was a part of poetry | ||
+ | * the Peripatetic philiosophers who taught and discoured while walking back and forth in a Stoa | ||
+ | * Collonade; the walking poets of the Hellenistic world, who would leave a little poem behind them them at a brook or under a shade tree where other walkers from town to town would find them, extolling the shade of the tree, the clarity and coolness of the water in the brook, | ||
+ | * The Sky- walking or Cloud-walking Taoist poets and ages, who would high uo in the mountain peaks in cloud banks | ||
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+ | * The Buddhist walking meditation, in which excruciating slowness first the path then the heel of each foot gloms the ground. | ||
+ | * the Anabis, the great walk of the greek soldiers trapped in Persia under Xenophon | ||
+ | * the walk to the end of the world that Alexander the Great wept from inability to complete | ||
+ | * the wandering scholars and troubadours of the European Middle Ages | ||
+ | * Mao's Lonf March and Gandhi' | ||
+ | * | ||