Social media, consultancy, training and advice from a flâneur of the internets. Blogger, writer, broadcaster and runner of Birmingham: It's Not Shit.
May 27th, 2009

Conversational Psychogeography — mapping real life with the social web

Psychogeography can be sort of explained as the geography of emotion, the relation between place and feeling.

The first attempt to formalise it was in the 50’s by various Lettritsts and while they were concentrating firmly on the urban (and architecture in particular) the idea was something that continued and was further worked on by Guy Debord in Critique of Urban Geography.

I’ve long been of the opinion that the social web, the blog especially was an ideal canvas for this sort of activity — allowing as it does fast and free publication of thoughts and also, increasingly, opportunities to “tag” the locations easily. Recently though I’ve been thinking more and more about just how perfect our internet of feelings and thoughts was for the study of emotion and location. As I had re-iterated to me at the recent Cultural Mappings Symposium — place is the great unifier and connector of all sorts of data, mapping allows juxtaposition of otherwise unrelated items, and that reveals the questions we should be answering.

A problem with psychogeography as defined by Debourd and the Situtationists is that in order to prepare reports on areas the pyschogeographer (as opposed to the wandering flâneur) must submit themselves to the dérive — a kind of deliberately directionless route with attempts to let emotion act as the guide.

“the dérive, or drift, was defined by the situationists as the ‘technique of locomotion without a goal’, in which ‘one or more persons during a certain period drop their usual motives for movement and action, their relations, their work and leisure activities, and let themselves be drawn by the attractions of the terrain and the encounters they find there’. The dérive acted as something of a model for the ‘playful creation’ of all human relationships.” (‘The most radical gesture: The Situationist International in a postmodern age’ by Sadie Plant)

The dérive attempts to mirror the movement of the residents or users of the area — and to disorientate the pyschogeographer to document emotion rather than topography. It is doomed in this attempt as the observer by his/her very nature is not experiencing the emotion of the inhabitant. This is analogous perhaps to Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle (there some pairs of properties on a sub-atomic level that cannot both be know — by measuring one you alter the other), as by becoming a supposedly dispassionate observer you cannot experience the emotions as they are commonly felt.

Psychogeography has stumbled in and out of fashion, and become sidelined as a worthwhile pursuit, referenced more often as a thread in fictions than as a pure study — where in fact the relation between emotion and place is one of the most important pieces of information going.

It’s what I’m calling Conversational Psychogeography — the applying of psychogeographical method to the conversations that take place online.

There are two strands to this:

Read the rest of this entry »

May 27th, 2009

LocalGovCamp

I’m attending LocalGovCamp, and I’ll let the blurb explain:

“LocalGovCamp is an unconference for local government. Taking place on 20 June 2009, at the Fazeley Studios in Birmingham, it will be a gathering of people interested in how local government needs to adapt to a world of social networks and data sharing.”

I’m planning to do a session about the Big City Talk project, how it came about, the methods we followed and the lessons that both local activists and local government officials may be able to learn from it.

May 22nd, 2009

My interview with David Shrigley

It seems a long time since I interviewed one of my favourite artists, but it's out now in the latest issue of the great Fused Magazine. [link]

by Jon Bounds | Posted in del.icio.us | View Comments | Tags: , , ,
May 20th, 2009

Seventeen things that people are actually saying when they retweet others – meish dot org: life, unfolding

"Retweeting (that is, repeating someone else’s tweet, with attribution) has emerged from daily twittering habits and has become part of Twitter’s cultural vocabulary. The idea of rebroadcasting something interesting/funny you’ve spotted isn’t new, and the custom of acknowledging your sources isn’t particularly revolutionary either, but what is interesting is that not all retweets (RTs) are alike." [link]

by Jon Bounds | Posted in del.icio.us | View Comments | Tags: , ,
May 20th, 2009

Better environments, Better lives

I'm doing a little bit of blogging on this site, with Nick Booth, kicked off by a conference, it’s all based around the theme of environmental justice. The idea is to encourage debate on how people can "breathe new life into the poorest environments, from neglected rivers to brownfield land sites, ensur[ing] environmental improvements are community driven and owned". [link]

by Jon Bounds | Posted in del.icio.us | View Comments | Tags: , ,
May 14th, 2009

Cultural Mapping – interactivecultures

A post I've written about a trip into academia, a cultural mapping symposium at Liverpool University. The guys at BCU were kind enough to sort it out for me, it really had my head buzzing with new map-based projects and ideas. Much more to come on this I think. [link]

by Jon Bounds | Posted in del.icio.us | View Comments | Tags: , , ,
May 14th, 2009

Commentable Classifieds

Here’s a quick idea I had during a discussion at JEECamp:

Papers have long been the place people made “announcements” — births, deaths and marriages — they still see this as an important service and revenue generator. It is however being fast made redundant by Facebook — where not only is it easy to make an announcement, but people can congratulate.

So would it be good for newspapers to connect their announcements in the hard copy with online versions — where people could comment. This leverages the remaining bit of prestige of the paper announcement to create a space online where the community can interact. It would also be a space to sell very targeted adverts — or at least prime spot for florists.

Of course it would need moderation — no one wants to see “glad your dead” comments — but it wouldn’t be complex legal points, so could probably be done very quickly.

Good idea or not? Can you see a reason not to do it?

May 13th, 2009

‘Safe hands’ Stott fails to inspire – so far | Puffbox.com

Wise words as ever from Simon about the appointment of the Government's new Director of Digital Engagement. [link]

by Jon Bounds | Posted in del.icio.us | View Comments | Tags: , ,
May 13th, 2009

Twitter Replies

A good while ago I wrote a long post about problems with the Twitter @reply system — Twitter it seems have been trying to fix this, but causing problems (see #fixreplies). I may humbly suggest that the now updated post is worth a read.

by Jon Bounds | Posted in twitter | View Comments | Tags: , ,
May 12th, 2009

Meme culture and how it builds community

On Friday I gave a talk to Pete Ashton’s Metapod Connect course. It was a gentle introduction to how memes can work on the web, and how the culture around them creates other (some would say…) more useful things too.

This is a recording of the the talk (complete with the odd giggle, a few interjections and a tiny bit of mobile phone interference) alongside the slides I used.

Interweb memes and contribution to community from bounder on Vimeo.














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