MythoMusic: Unless you're in a library, Isao Tomita's Snowflakes Are Dancing (below) is recommended site exploring music...
This is a website for walkers, artists who use walking in their art, students who are discovering and studying a world of resistant and aesthetic walking, anyone who is troubled by official guides to anywhere, urbanists, geographers, site-specific performers, town planners and un-planners, urban explorers, entrepreneurs and activists who don’t want to drive to the revolution.
Depending on who you are and what you want, there are different ways to go:
Here are two introductions to the notion of mythogeography: one for walkers and interested passers-by and another, more robustly contextual, for researchers and students.
The Mythogeography book is a one-stop walkers’ service station.
For advice about getting started with ‘drifting’, here’s a simple starter kit.
Here are some mental exercises for sideways walkers.
Here is an archive of mythogeographical performances, walks, talks and essays.
Here's the difference between psychogeography and mythogeography.
MythoUghts is a provocollection of Phil Smith's thoughts on affairs current and mythogeographical. We'll notify you of new Mythoughts via Twitter (@mythogeography), Facebook (/mythogeography). If you sign up in the box on the left you'll get occasional mythogeographical e-mails. You can opt out again at any time.
Finally, if you want ideas for ways to tour this site, visit our old home page. It's like the Old Great North Road only less direct.
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