02 August 2013 @ 05:52 pm
par pamestām vietām  
My argument is not that spatial order is unnecessary, but that the disciplinary, performative, aestheticised urban praxis demanded by commercial and bureaucratic regimes which are refashioning cities into realms of surveillance, consumption, and dwelling – characterised by an increase in single-purpose spaces – is becoming too dominant. (..) Regimes of urban behaviour are consolidated and act to suppress the body’s expressivity and the range of sensations experienced. These orderings are violated in the ruin which, once an exemplary space of regulation, has become deliciously disordered. Ruins confound the normative spacings of things, practices and people. They open up possibilities for regulated urban bodies to escape their shackles in expressive pursuits and sensual experience, foreground alternative aesthetics about where and how things should be situated, and transgress boundaries between outside and inside, and between human and non-human spaces.
(..)
Exploring a ruin is a kind of anti-tourism.

//Tim Edensour, Industrial Ruins: Spaces, Aesthetics and Materiality