Dublin Core
Titre
To walk as we listen to the city
Sujet
[SHS:ARCHI] Humanities and Social Sciences/Architecture, space management
Walk
Senses
Urban space
Description
Cities are built around the sense of sight, for those who can see. Since the XIXth century, and still today, this obviousness comes down through many work of literature and urban sociology about the mobility of the pedestrians in town. From Siegfried Kracauer to Georg Simmel, from Walter Benjamin to Lincoln A. Ryave and James N. Schenken, to walk in the city would almost exclusively request the visual attention of the pedestrian. But in all our towns and cities there are men and women, deprived of the sense of sight, going about their daily lives. How do people with impaired sight operate? What can we learn from them about the role of the senses in our cities and the process of getting about?
Créateur
Thomas, Rachel
Source
Annual conference Urban Sustainability : rethinking senses of place. London, 31 august - 2 september 2005
Annual conference Urban Sustainability : rethinking senses of place
Date
2005
Langue
ENG
Type
conference proceeding
Identifiant
http://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-00596831
http://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/59/68/31/PDF/2005_RT_COL_ToWalk.pdf
Couverture
Londres
United Kingdom