Walking Astrachan

ID 63981
 
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Walking Astrachan is a Russian Version of LIGNA's Walking the City, made for the streets of Astrachan, next to the Wolga.
Audio
01:07:13 h, 62 MB, mp3
mp3, 128 kbit/s, Stereo (44100 kHz)
Upload vom 23.05.2014 / 14:09

Dateizugriffe: 813

Klassifizierung

Beitragsart: Hörspiel
Sprache: andere
Redaktionsbereich: Politik/Info, Kultur, in anderen Sprachen
Entstehung

AutorInnen: LIGNA
Radio: FSK, Hamburg im www
Produktionsdatum: 23.05.2014
CC BY-NC-SA
Creative Commons BY-NC-SA
Namensnennung - Nicht-kommerziell - Weitergabe unter gleichen Bedingungen erwünscht
Skript
The most normal and inconspicuous practice performed in a city is walking. But how one walks through the city is never the same – and may even differ from city to city. In any case walking transforms every street in a stage which one enters and leaves. Every city has it’s pace and it´s manner of walking, even if this may not be sensed in every street. There are no rules that instruct these particularities – each pedestrian is simply affected by the rhythm of the steps of the others. Rhythms, states the economic theorist Karl Bücher already in the early 20th century, is the strongest means to foster processes of learning and to create coherence within a group of people. So the gait is shaped by mimetical imitation and gradually becomes a part of the unconscious, mute body knowledge which rules our every day life actions.

Walking in the City invites the inhabitants of the city to listen to an audio play, which adresses the unconsciousness of walking the city. A kind of inner movie tells a new story of the street. At the same time, the listeners constitute a strange collective. They are not walking together as a group but are dispersed: Independent yet synchronized, listening yet acting, invisible yet producing an uncanny situation, already when they all stop at the same time, pause for a moment and then start walking again. The most normal and inconspicuous practice becomes anormal and suspicious. Thus the audience can change the street scene without exposing themselves as participants of an artistic intervention into the everyday life just by walking a little bit faster than all the others. Following their mimetic urge, other pedestrians will get influenced unconsciously by the proliferation of a new normality, sensing that an uncanny duplication of reality is taking over. Then, during the course of the performance, more visible actions are proposed to happen, reflecting the long tradition of occupying the streets for political reasons.