Part of our discussion in CoPhi today concerns Susan Neiman's ideas about the mind- and maturity-expanding potential of travel, in Why Grow Up: Subversive Thoughts for an Infantile Age. Enlightened folk go places. "If you do not travel you are likely to suppose your own cultural assumptions to make up human reality... Travel is at least as important for learning about yourself and your own cultures it is for understanding others." (152)
In a locked-down pandemic, though, movement is circumscribed. (We're not going to LA in June, for instance.) That doesn't make it any less enlightening, as this lovely photo-essay in today's Times shows.
A Cyclist on the English Landscape
Grounded by the pandemic, a travel photographer spent the year pedaling the roads around his home, resulting in a series of poetic self-portraits.
Grounded by the pandemic, a travel photographer spent the year pedaling the roads around his home, resulting in a series of poetic self-portraits.
A year ago, as a travel photographer grounded by the pandemic, I started bringing a camera and tripod with me on my morning bicycle rides, shooting them as though they were magazine assignments. It started out as just something to do — a challenge to try to see the familiar through fresh eyes. Soon it blossomed into a celebration of traveling at home...
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