Field Study's Man in E11 contemplates time in pieces and the Utopian moment
I don't know where I was when the numbers in my wrist watch freed themselves from their allotted positions. The 'don'tknowwhereabouts' of this event might have been a temporal Fluxus moment; a Utopian epiphany, if that is, I had had a letter C and a letter R to add to my ANIUM. No; what have been omitted from this potentially complex temporal and geographical situation, are (actually) the letters T and I and T. Perhaps cr and tit are vying for attachment to my anium in the 'Don'tknowwhere' of Lost and Found in E11. Not knowing where and when I am seems to be the basis for some elementary searching questions. To this beginning I have been delving into the wisdom and insights of others. Here is a selective list of researching encounters from the last week (if that is what it was or is?) -
NILS NORMAN - The Dismal Garden.
JAY RAYNER - A Greedy Man in a Hungry World.
ROBERT PAARLBERG - Food Politics: What Everyone Needs to Know.
GEORGE MONBIOT/HAWKWOOD NURSERY.... - T I P P
BBC HORIZON - Should I Eat Meat?
RAT PARK
ALBERT POTRONY - Another Utopia
DAVID CROUCH COLIN WARD - The Allotment - Its Landscape and Culture.
SPONTANEOUS CITY IN THE TREE OF HEAVEN.
BBC R4 - Plants: From Roots to Riches.
UTOPIAS// Edited by Richard Noble.
The perimeter of Luton Airport.
JOURNAL OF FIELD STUDY INTERNATIONAL - FIELD REPORT 2013.
FIELD (Bourdieu)
All this consumption amounts to 'Don'tknowwhereabouts' in the habitus of Julian Beere and Field Study's Man in E11 until it is arbitrarily condensed into a contribution to the Journal of Field Study International.
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