(2014). Reader, Tourist, and Psychogeography Today: A Categorical Imperative of Travel.ย Coldnoon: Travel Poeticsย 3ย (1), 152-74.
Abstract
With the death of the author โ whose intention is otherwise the chief anchor of the text, according to Knapp and Michaels โ reading risks being led into the culture of mere interpretation, instead of reading as a wholesome experience of the rewriting of the spatial text. This gaze of the interpreter can be equated with tourist gaze given the theoretical analogy that the paper draws between reading and travelling. Considering Barthesโ notions of jouissance and dรฉrive in the reading practice is seen as a subversive, even perverse, and a travelling act at once. It must preserve the site of jouissance from all forms of reconnaissance and interpretation by another. Given the appropriation of Barthes by architectural thought, particularly Tschumi, and the treatment of the text as a metaphor for the city, the paper goes on to identify the aesthetic of delinquency in the spaces that English writers such as Blake, De Quincey and Conan Doyle have created, thus observing a parallel between the delinquency of the marginal figures occupying this spatial text and the readerโs own. In this psychogeographical adoption of the delinquent persona the reader becomes one with the spatial text, thereby acquiring the agency to create his own culture of sociolects based on the text. Psychogeographical practices in reading are thus never far from the corrupting influence of the touristic-gaze โ if such a thing could exist in the reading practice โ creating a class of its own, based on its appropriation of the space and the architecture of the text, into oneโs lived experiences. This adoption of delinquency from the spatial text is prone to create a new other zone of marginals and delinquents in the lived society, which the reading-traveller should be wary of, and absolutely hospitable towards, while being hospitable to the other landscape of the text. The paper concludes thus by posing a situation in which the reader can be a tourist in his own text, and how this can be observed as a categorical imperative of travel.ย
Keywords
Travelogy; Arthur Conan Doyle; Thomas De Quincey; Psychogeography; Immanuel Kant
