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<big><big><big>🛠️👷🏼  🛠️👷🏼  🛠️👷🏼  🛠️👷🏼  🛠️👷🏼  🛠️👷🏼  🛠️👷🏼  🛠️👷🏼  🛠️👷🏼  🛠️👷🏼  🛠️👷🏼  🛠️👷🏼</big></big></big>
=<span style="padding-left: 0vw; padding-right:2vw; padding-top: 2vw; padding-bottom: 2vw; background-color:#FFC300; color: white; font-weight:bold; font-size:30px; font-family: Georgia, serif; letter-spacing: 0.4rem;">Space vs Place</span>=
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Each culture defines the concepts of space and place in a unique way. They take on almost fluid forms, taking the shape of the context in which they are applied like water in a container.
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<small><small>La parola rituale, nel linguaggio comune è altamente inflazionata.
Space is multidimensional. It’s typically understood in terms of direction, volume, and distance, sp with a strong mathematical character, an abstract form. <br>
Tutto diventa rituale.
Instead Place is much more relative, connected to a more personal perception and subjective experience of the world. A place holds significance, identity. Places are where people live and interact, making them rich with cultural and social meanings.
Come se si trattase della ciliegina sulla torta, la caratteristica esotica che aggiunge sapore al piatto insipido, alla situazione noiosa, all'atto ripetitivo.<br>
A momenti scivolo nella doccia mi ritrovo tutte le boccette di magico sapore rituals della mia coinquilina tra le mani, l'algoritmo mi consiglia video di rituali coreani per avere la pelle di porcellana da una settimana, ahia punge profondamente le mie insicurezze oh no, apro un giornalino plastificato, ecco il rituale per dimagrire, ritrovare la femminilità? ritrovamela caro giornalino tu che sai, rituali tutti femminili questi, nessun capretto che fa una brutta fine qui, virile virile, solo spray al rosmarino sul cuoio capelluto per sentirmi donna e non pensare all'amante di mio marito. Guardo la mia pila di libri entrata nella mia stanza, grida contenuti scritti da uomini in crisi esistenziali, ricchi annoiati che si sono dati all'occulto e al sadomaso, così disincantati dal mondo. Ritualizzatemi sto cazzo.<br>
Seguirò la massa, renderò la mia stessa scoperta dei rituali un rituale, cercherò di deritualizzare il dederitualizzabile. Nessun valore esplicativo, ma quanto suonerà figo. <br>
Ripeto, ritualizzatemi sto cazzo. <br></small></small>
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When thinking about space in a much more conceptual aspect, George Simmel is the first one popping up. Simmel worked on conceptualising space from a sociological point of view, being focused on its materiality and spatiality rather than treating it as a non material concept. <br>
He explored how space shapes social relations and individual experiences around cities, markets, and how they function as hubs for social interactions connected to the negotiation of power between individuals.
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''⤷anthropology and ethnography supported by new multimedia languages, anthropology of the contemporary <br>''
A key point of Simmel’s theory is spatial differentiation. He argued that different social groups and individuals perceive and use space in different ways, always reflecting their own social status, cultural backgrounds, and personal identities. This differentiation can lead to spatial hierarchies and segregation.<br>
Simmel emphasised that space is not static but constantly shaped by human activities.<br>
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Following these studies, Doreen Massey rethought the concept of space while calling attention to how spatial relations between people, cities, and actions are the main point of focus to understand power structures. She describes space as "unfixed, contested, and multiple," showing that places are dynamic, in a constant evolutionary state. Massey's perspective can be aligned with the ecological idea of the earth as a single breathing organism, which can be maybe understood as fractal in a sense, because of its interconnectedness.<br>
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Keith Basso introduces an interesting concept, interanimation, a process where people and places engage in an ecological relationship, creating a unique web of meaning. This dynamic that builds space make places seem alive even in the wildest stillness.<br>
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''<small>_ E un'immagine che descrive il processo di interanimation durante il quale il paesaggio geografico si sovrappone a quello mentale nel momento in cui un luogo viene sentito (sensed) in maniera attiva (107).
"Un'oscura sete". Natura nella Milano di Milo De Angelis _</small>''
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==<span style="padding-left: 0vw; padding-right:2vw; padding-top: 2vw; padding-bottom: 2vw; background-color:#FFC300; color: white; font-weight:bold; font-size:20px; font-family: Georgia, serif; letter-spacing: 0.3rem;">Transformation, Non-places, Deterritorialisation</span>==
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Spaces become places when people use them and create a culture around that use, like a school or a bank. In modern societies the anthropologist Marc Augé called them "non-places", urban leftovers that sit between places. And so we all constantly transition from place to place, slipping through unseen non-places. Train stations, airports, and waiting rooms are great examples of non-places, places that are stripped of culture and interpersonal interactions.<br>
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J. Nicholas Entrikin, geographer, divides place into objective and subjective, fundamental aspects to be taken into account to understand liminality of spaces. He calls the betweenness of places the meeting point of subjective and objective space.<br>
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Henri Lefebvre, the marxist sociologist, challenged the classical binary interpretation of space, proposing the concept of "thirdspace," which connects spaces of living and spaces of leisure. To him a place is a physical and social landscape filled with meaning through everyday social practices, working across different spatial and temporal planes, it’s neither home nor workspace, nor space of sociality. That space we transit in, an hybrid, then what is the difference between a thirdspace and a non-place?<br>
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=the conceptualisation of ritual, rite, symbolic meaning=
''<small>Deterritorialisation by Deleuze and Guattari.<br>
Tinbergen - four questions <br>
When referring to culture, anthropologists use the term deterritorialized to refer to a weakening of ties between culture and place. This means the removal of cultural subjects and objects from a certain location in space and time.[9] It implies that certain cultural aspects tend to transcend specific territorial boundaries in a world that consists of things fundamentally in motion.</small>''
Ritual morphology <br>
Performance <br>
De-ritualization? <br>
Classic sociological theories: Durkheim, Weber, Lévi-Straus.<br>
Dissolution of traditional networks of meaning, crisis of the modern concept of the individual, loss of relevance of the
ritual within the frame of social practices. <br>
Ritual as pre-industrial, pre-modern model to be rejected, modernity as liberation from ritual.<br>
Highest expression of the annulment of the individual in social conformity. <br>
Sacred-profane dichotomy, ritual to be deciphered, two parts of human rationality economic+social, Malinowski with the functionalist theory. <br>
Giglioli, Fele <br>
Goffman, rite as the construction of morality and sociality <br>
Turner, performance, liminarity, leisure <br>
Clifford Geertz <br>
shopping, devotion <br>


=De Martino, body-magic-modernity=
==<span style="padding-left: 0vw; padding-right:2vw; padding-top: 2vw; padding-bottom: 2vw; background-color:#FFC300; color: white; font-weight:bold; font-size:20px; font-family: Georgia, serif; letter-spacing: 0.3rem;">How to encounter a place, ecosystem</span>==
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Massey describes places as constellations of trajectories, highlighting their porous, sponge nature. She argues against establishing severe boundaries or identities to places, as this can lead to nationalistic or attitudes. Instead, places should be seen for her as dynamic networks of events, constantly being reshaped.<br>
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To truly encounter a place, we must recognise that we are part of it. Throwntogetherness, actively participating and leaving traces that contribute to its ongoing form, narrative. Emmanuel Levinas' writings and the holistic, ecological, approach of deep ecology on humankind as an interlocking web of changing relations, offer a framework for the ethical engagement approach that some sociologists and geographers took inspiration from. This involves developing self reflection,  awareness, getting almost to anthropomorphizing a place, to observing its behaviour thoughtfully, empathetically.<br>
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''So, while being a complicated and unfixed set of networks, a place might also have the capacity to remember, to hold traces of past activities, in the loosest sense. While it remembers, it does not necessarily do this in a human way. The memory of place may then be thought of as fluid, transitory, and open-ended, activated only by those who pass through.''<br>
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==<span style="padding-left: 0vw; padding-right:2vw; padding-top: 2vw; padding-bottom: 2vw; background-color:#FFC300; color: white; font-weight:bold; font-size:20px; font-family: Georgia, serif; letter-spacing: 0.3rem;">Place-specific art</span>==
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''Lucy Lippard, american writer and art critic, defines place-specific art as art governed by a place ethic, accentuating its location rather than just occupying, using it.
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Examples of contemporary works that are place specific in Lippard’s sense:<br>
*John Newling’s 2010 Root Zone and Local History. https://www.john-newling.com/street-works
*Lucy Harrison, how we experience place, memory, location, Remains project
*Roger Hiorns Seizure installation, he filled a council flat in elephant and castle with copper sulphate solution and then rained it
*Wrights and Sites’ Wonders of Weston 2010 Everything you need to build a town in here, 41 signs scattered across a variety of locations https://www.situations.org.uk/projects/wonders-of-weston/
http://www.mis-guide.com/<br>
http://www.mis-guide.com/ws/people.html#phil<br>
''The metal plaques appear without explanation and offer instructions, observations or comments, which are designed to encourage the reader to somehow engage with their immediate vicinity by way of real or imagined actions. At the Old Town Quarry, which the artists describe as the keystore site for the series, there is a map and description of the project in its entirety. Not only does the work lead the visitor (tourist and resident alike) to unexpected places, but it also highlights the layering of historical and contemporary stories and associations that surround us everywhere''
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==<span style="padding-left: 0vw; padding-right:2vw; padding-top: 2vw; padding-bottom: 2vw; background-color:#FFC300; color: white; font-weight:bold; font-size:20px; font-family: Georgia, serif; letter-spacing: 0.3rem;">Counter-Tourism and site writing</span>==
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Counter-tourism and site writing are great alternative perspectives on living with/in/against places, disrupting traditional tourist routes and attractions, encouraging deeper exploration of the experiential character of a location. Smith’s tours aim to reveal hidden layers of a place, inviting participants to engage with the urban landscape in unexpected ways.<br>
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Phil Smith, a member of the artistic collective Wrights & Sites, is an important figure in the world of counter-tourism and mythogeography (probably the main intellectual writing about these concepts).<br>
His works, including "Counter-Tourism: The Handbook" and "Mythogeography," bibles for unconventional wandering into urban spaces.<br>
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Jane Rendell’s concept of "site writing" emphasises even more the role of narrative and personal engagement in encountering places. Her researches focus on everything concerning situatedness and site-specificity, exploring how writing can intersect with the experiential aspects of a space.<br>
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De Martino ethnologist anthropologist, one of the first in Italy to do field research in teams, was born in 1908 a bourgeois, fascist then socialist. No fear of changing his mind is evident in his works.
A contemporary world in modern italy but the cultural context becomes problematic.
De Martino was profoundly influenced by phenomenology and existentialism, schools of thought that remained outside of the anthropological realm until few years ago. He is becoming more and more compelling to the anthropological studies scene thanks to this change in the mentality of the public, probably the crumbling of an everlastic eurocentrism, western centric view in all sciences ans studies.
De Martino himself was surely influenced greatly by that point of view, so common in those years, still he struggled with the idea of his mentor, Croce, that drew a line between human and non-human, primitive and non-primitive. Croce insisted on presentism, the idea that all history is contemporary.
Functionalists didn’t enjoy De Martino theories, as too philosophical and, surely, political.


De Martino delved deeply into phenomenology and existentialism, both of which were not part of the anthropological discourse until recently. His growing significance in anthropological studies seems linked to a changing public mindset, possibly indicating a change from the longstanding Eurocentric perspective that once pervaded various scientific disciplines, and we all know that. <br>
==<span style="padding-left: 0vw; padding-right:2vw; padding-top: 2vw; padding-bottom: 2vw; background-color:#FFC300; color: white; font-weight:bold; font-size:20px; font-family: Georgia, serif; letter-spacing: 0.3rem;">Landscape of the margin, haunted, rotting</span>==
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Landscape refers to the visible features of an area of land, including its physical natural elements as well as all human made things such as houses, roads, and cultivated lands. Landscape unite both natural and human altered environments, it’s like space, but not abstract :).<br>
Landscape as something that can be shaped, produced, influenced on human or natural actions and processes. As they are in a constant state of transition landscapes themself are intrinsically liminal.<br>
Liminal landscape ad the one that are shabby, desolate, marginal, abandoned have been embraced in popular culture, mainly within subcultures thriving on the web, tied to urbex culture mania, thirsty for that sublime decay that permeate ruins, industrial abandoned sites, degraded lands, ‘dead zones’.<br>
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https://api.pageplace.de/preview/DT0400.9781136134364_A23812945/preview-9781136134364_A23812945.pdf<br><br>
Shield's discussion about places on the margin is quite interesting. He focuses on margin and peripheries of Britain, exposing the image and stigma connected to marginality, the central role of “spatialisation” to cultures and national states. He followed the intimate link of the concept of space and the categorisation of practises and modes of social interaction connected to the so called “Low culture”.<br>
Drawing on Orientalism, by Said, Shield highlights the concept of symbolic exclusion elucidating how the West employed strategies of "positional superiority" to assert dominance over marginalised groups, inside itself and outside through colonisation. Shield also references Strallybrass and White to show the eroticisation, fantasization and still repulsion of the top society to the low Other. This could be translated in a lot of ways, through different contexts.<br>
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Liminal landscapes are tinged with death, connected to transformation and processes of becoming, and with entropy,with its liminal flux made up of organic forms flowing and propagating, as into a body the vascular system branches out. Lichenous, constantly rotting. Entropy as  radical impermanence.<br>
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<small>''The proliferation and celebration of liminal spatiality has become connected to the commercialization and intensifying social and political control of exactly such spaces, annulling their transformative potential while flattening our mental and physical landscapes. It is also this process that, far from deleting the playful and carnivalesque from the modern world, actually turns the world itself into a permanent carnival. This involves, as pointed out by Andrews (2009), a constant but often hopeless search for 'experience' (could it be connected to core??). In a world where an increasing number of people are in constant search for excitement and stimulation of the senses, boredom is always lurking around the corner. A carnival that never ends stops being fun; it turns into a mechanical role play. Liminality cannot and should not be considered an end point or a desirable state of being; when this happens, creativity and freedom lose their existential basis and turn into its opposites: boredom and a sense of imprisonment.<br>
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we need to turn to the concreteness of lived space''<br></small>
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De Martino himself was undeniably shaped by this outlook of society. However, he was against the ideas of his mentor, Croce, who firmly drew distinctions between “human” and “non-human”, the “primitive” and the “non-primitive”. Croce was all about presentism, saying that all historical events are contemporaneous.
==<span style="padding-left: 0vw; padding-right:2vw; padding-top: 2vw; padding-bottom: 2vw; background-color:#FFC300; color: white; font-weight:bold; font-size:20px; font-family: Georgia, serif; letter-spacing: 0.3rem;">Mapping, navigating, regulations</span>==
De Martino's theories faced resistance from functionalists who found them too philosophical and overly political. <br>
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One of the main aspect of his work was the "critical ethnocentricm", his concerns in the postwar ideological struggles and historical movements, that bring us to his '''subalternity''' concept,  subalternity can be connected to his exploration of the dynamics between dominant and subordinate cultural elements, especially in the context of religious practices, his focus in how marginalized and subaltern groups expressed their social, economic, and existential struggles through cultural practices, such as rituals and beliefs. Negotiation, coping mechanism to regain identity. He dindn't really use the term subalternity ho we now see it in postcolonial theories, but still his works helped a new understanding and humanisation of marginalized and oppressed groups. <br>
''How is then possible to navigate liminal spaces?''
''Is there any different approach we could have on mapping liminal spaces?''
''What are the mechanics and processes by which liminalities work or function in relation to landscape? What are the temporal geographies of liminal landscapes? What are the politics of liminal landscapes?''
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Liminal spaces, in military and territorial contexts, go against the traditional methods of control and mapping. Unlike conventional landscapes liminal spaces cannot be controlled or commanded in the same way. Instead, what they must be "invoked" (Moore, R.L. (1991) ‘Ritual, Sacred Space, and Healing: the Psychoanalyst as Ritual
Elder’). This shows a more ritualistic approach to navigating liminal spaces, that indeed demands a different kind of knowledge, one derived not just from maps or commands but from direct engagement and ritualistic practices. Maps are a no no.<br>
The liminal landscape of the border zone, for example, operates beyond laws and logic, challenging typical forms of knowledge. It creates conditions of urgency, emergency, necessitating the cultivation of a diy anarchic approach?<br>
In such liminal spaces, where nothing moves while still changing, wanderers can lose sight of their path, even if that is a familiar terrain, highlighting the disorienting nature of these kind of spaces. <br>
Improvise. Adapt. Overcome.<br>
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Gayatri Spivak - postcolonial studies.
Van Gennep talks a bit about “territorial passage” in the past accompanied by various formalities that ranged from political, legal to those of a more magic religious type. Our contemporary neoliberal landscape is not even borderless as it sell itself. Mobility remains a privilege as it always was, accessible to some denied to many. Borders and restrictions continue to shape the movement of people, echoing the structured and ritualised passages of earlier times but within a modern framework of control and regulation.<br>
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Political, legal and economic formalities are now as likely to be used to prevent the free movement of a person from one place to another.
Mediterranean sea, visas, migration policies.<br>
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il mondo magico, problematic work, written while an anti-fascist partisan, 4 years ('48), he tried to distance himself from the past, close to Crucian liberalism. The concept of presence emerges.
Questions of extrasensory paranormal powers (clairvoyance, magical healing...) are addressed, the attempt is not to condemn is to go beyond and see how to restore a statute of reality to these phenomena, he tries to give cultural value, a rare vision of anthropology.
what emerges is that man can influence nature, Mircea Eliade, historian of the sacred, does not appreciate the magical world, he says that de martino creates an precultural idealism.


paroxysm.
==<span style="padding-left: 0vw; padding-right:2vw; padding-top: 2vw; padding-bottom: 2vw; background-color:#FFC300; color: white; font-weight:bold; font-size:20px; font-family: Georgia, serif; letter-spacing: 0.3rem;">Danger, unbelonging, the border</span>==
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<small>''Never before in the history of the world have non-places occupied so much space. (Benko and Strohmayer 1997: 23)''</small>
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Anything is now liminal?<br>
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the visa state of suspence, liminal state<br>
Inhabiting the neutral zone between one territorialized state and another<br>
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To me this just feel as a privileged approach: Rogoff argues that "unbelonging" is not about feeling lost or lacking something, but rather about a deliberate, ongoing process of detachment to make way for new possibilities. She calls for an active form of "unbelonging," not as marginalization or rebellion, nor as a way of dropping out, but as a refusal to accept the terms and implications that become normalised in this kind of discourses.<br>
I might have not fully understand her point. <br>
To me unbelonging is most of the time an act that the individual is not fully conscious about, nor involved in, it’s something comes from the outside world, that digs into the consciousness of a person and sediment, in a way that just unbelonging becomes naturalised. To me that cannot be a choice, unbelonging as a choice is still belong to an idea, a movement at least.<br>
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The Border is a traditional landscape of transition, now it mirrors the global landscape shaped by global capital. The modern hyperconnected landscape is a constant flux of transition, embodying a state of perpetual liminality. The current era is characterised by an enduring of indeterminacy (still, why is that negative, as it is the most natural form of reality?), disorientation and limbo. <br>Bauman's concept of liquid modernity or liquid life encapsulates this condition where everything is disposable and perpetually in motion.<br>
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==='''Tarantism, mass hysteria'''===
''In fact, Turner notes how the turbulence and ‘topsy- turvy-dom’ of liminality was often used to reinforce stability in the post- liminal phase, where ‘reversal underlines to the members of a community that chaos is the alternative to cosmos, so they’d better stick to cosmos’ (Turner 1982: 41)''
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<small>''Modernity itself is a kind of permanent liminality: a continuous testing, a constant search for self-overcoming, an incessant breaking down of traditional boundaries, and an existential sense of alienation and loss of being-at-home that in the modern episteme establishes itself as normality (Szakolczai)''</small>


crisis of being in the world, rootedness that flows through culture, rootedness is lost and so begins the crisis that lowers man into the pure organic, pure vitality, freudian impulses, unconscious energy urges.
=<span style="padding-left: 0vw; padding-right:2vw; padding-top: 2vw; padding-bottom: 2vw; background-color:#FFC300; color: white; font-weight:bold; font-size:30px; font-family: Georgia, serif; letter-spacing: 0.4rem;">Liminality</span>=
Culture is enhancement of the world, there is horizon background natural limit where man acts vertically, culture is momentum, subject to crisis which then brings man down.
De Martino feels the detachment that southern culture has in relation to a European, Italian, broader context, he does not criticise it but analyses it, hence his desire to understand what the reasons are for living in a community that seems to be outside History. Meaning of contemporaneity?


tarantismo, mass hysteria, trance and hysterical delirium, convulsion and loss of consciousness. He is the first that looks for a different interpretation. Every bite is remorse, a bite symbolising discomfort (mourning, marriage, violence...), 95 per cent women in Salento up to that time referred to as female hysteria. Link between strong discomfort and marginality and subalternity of the population (second post-war period). Suffering incorporated.
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In Sicily similar but often men not women.
Between-ness is the core concept of liminality.<br>
St Paul's collective performance, trance of liberation, never definitive.
Liminality, "limen”, threshold, the concept of being in-between, partially belonging to two worlds while not wholly fitting into either.
A transitional metaphor.<br>
Liminal spaces are related to the uses and practices of space in constructions of identity, particularly in the context of contemporary approaches to the study of space, place and mobility. Experiential landscapes associated with mobilities, such as border zones and transitional spaces, serve as fertile ground for exploring the ritual, performative, and embodied geographies that shape individual and communities’ identities.
The emotional response to such spaces is where liminality truly manifests. It feels both otherworldly and familiar simultaneously. They possess an unsettling familiarity, feeling both open yet enclosed, safe yet unsettling, and artificial yet natural.<br>
It is not one or the other but both at the same time and can be hard to describe because we want to describe it as only one of those things because the other contradicts it.<br>


Heidegger - presence concept.
Liminal spaces are usually associated with a sense of discomfort. They feel frozen in time, mere husks that spell whispers of their own past. They are impersonal, surreal, part of an altered reality, ambiguous, they are perceived as deviations from the norm.<br>


Domestication of the crisis, choral and dance externals, could manifest suffering unacceptable in reality, like carnival, outburst. The ritual device does not lead to cure but to healing, healing does not imply the end of pain, but the resurfacing of discomfort and the alleviation of sorrow. Tarantismo cultural institution, there are rules, there are ritual norms, disorder comes out in an orderly manner, there is plantus? ritual technical fiction, if not disorder would lead to irremediable crisis. Symbolism does not work Institutional blockade, tarantati lose healing and condemned by new society that imposes itself. In individual houses the tarantati are assisted by the community.
Humanity leaves behind places that are no longer relevant.<br>
Spider, poison, crisis, dance within the ritual system, embodied symbols.
Places get their energy just by life being in them, they get alive by you being there. A space that is empty will collapse into a frozen condition and begin to deteriorate.<br>
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Liminal spaces evoke nostalgia because they lack specific details, allowing people to connect with them personally. You don't remember the specifics of every place you've been, but when you encounter an image of such a space, you try to associate it with your own experiences. This lack of detail is a key characteristic of liminal spaces, making them universally relatable and familiar in our hyperconnected world.<br>
Liminal spaces, such as supermarkets, have similar structures across different countries, reinforcing this sense of universal familiarity.<br>
Liminal spaces' features often include hyper-artificial elements, like plastic, old carpets, and the buzz of neon lights. These spaces can trigger repressed memories, often bringing childhood to mind. Searching for liminal spaces online frequently reveals images of places from childhood, blending nostalgia for the past with the realization that these moments will never be reclaimed.<br>
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In rethinking ideas of the liminal, even in an anthropological and sociological sense, it’s possible to uncover contemporary issues surrounding technology, surveillance and power structures, as well as postcolonialism overlooked dynamics.<br>


Shamanism. unbearable normality, historical living and suffering, either you come out badly and sink (you eat people lol) or you make cultural resolutions. Scars remain, remorse is the scar.
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'if these wall could talk they would say nothing'
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==<span style="padding-left: 0vw; padding-right:2vw; padding-top: 2vw; padding-bottom: 2vw; background-color:#FFC300; color: white; font-weight:bold; font-size:20px; font-family: Georgia, serif; letter-spacing: 0.3rem;">Uncanny Valley</span>==
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One of the concept that most of the time is associated with liminality is the "uncanny valley"
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it's a fascinating concept often discussed in relation to human interaction with humanoid robots or computer generated characters, it concern the emotional response that this interaction evokes. Usually this emotional response appears as of an unsettling effect.
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Masahiro Mori, a japanese roboticist proposed this concept in the '70. He proposed that as robots become more human like, there's a point where they appear almost, but not quite, human, which causes a negative emotional reaction in humans. This is because the slight imperfections or deviations from human appearance and behavior become more noticeable and unsettling as the resemblance increases.<br>
The phenomenon has important implications for robotics, animation, and virtual reality, where artists and designers that want to create human like experiences must navigate through a delicate balance to avoid triggering discomfort in users. <br>
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When something is too different from what we're accustomed to, it can be easily dismissed as unrealistic or fantastical. However, when something comes very close to reality but has slight imperfections or deviations, it disrupts our expectations and can evoke a strong negative reaction. This is because our brains are constantly comparing incoming sensory information with stored patterns of what we consider normal or familiar.<br>
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<img src="https://media.giphy.com/media/v1.Y2lkPTc5MGI3NjExZ2FhajBkczFhYTJidGVuOWM1N2R2bWF3djc3d3BuMmxidWZ4MG40ciZlcD12MV9pbnRlcm5hbF9naWZfYnlfaWQmY3Q9Zw/e9rSMWVH6mEjpgUXSu/giphy.gif" width=190px><img src="https://projects-mkt.s3.amazonaws.com/blog/2023/8.%20Agosto/18.08.23%20-%20Uncanny%20Valley%3A%20conhe%C3%A7a%20o%20fen%C3%B4meno%20do%20%E2%80%9Cvale%20da%20estranheza%E2%80%9D/4.%20Filmes.png" width=330px><img src="https://imageio.forbes.com/specials-images/imageserve/5dcaa0392c886a0007ebec7f/Sonic/960x0.jpg?format=jpg&width=320"><br>
* A parrot in an uncanney valley situation
* Cats, the live action💥, wasn't really appreciated
* The Sonic Movie, less "terrifying" CGI Hedgehog after internet meltdown


Forgotten suburbs, discovery of Italian national identity, historical transition, denial of historical suffering, loneliness, power structures, social isolation and mental illness. Failure of tarantism good for De Martino as a crisis linked to historical conditions, but sceptical because the discomfort could have been translated into other instruments, only one instrument is taken away (e.g. carabiniere photo looking mad tarantato on the ground, who does not participate in the ritual, incomprehension). Criticism of the system through symbols.
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The concept of "uncanny valley" can easily be applied to spaces as well.
One of the most common example of uncanney valley liminal spaces are abandoned buildings, places with a sense of mystery that can definitely evoke feelings of dread and creepiness. This happens because of various factors, like an increased informational entropy (https://www.researchgate.net/publication/361850311_Structural_deviations_drive_an_uncanny_valley_of_physical_places, elaborate!) or lack of enviromental information?<br>
When we enter an unfamiliar or abandoned space, our brains may struggle to make sense of the surroundings because they lack the contextual information we typically rely on to assess safety and predict outcomes.<br>
Our perception of creepiness in environments is a complex web of sensory inputs, cognitive processing, and emotional responses. It's fascinating how our minds react to environmental cues in ways that shape our experiences of space and place.
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The pillars of liminal space:


Mystical crises. Lévy-Bruhl ecstasy.
* Disgust
Order in the understanding of mysticism. Alcoholism?
* Ambiguity
Transcultural phenomenon, also common traits. Tarantismo is not mysticism, no supernatural contact, saints (Carlo Severi) can heal but as gods can punish, complex relationship, no love as in mysticism (Christian and otherwise, generally). Saints from a theological and cultural point of view.
* Lighting and occlusion
* Social presence or absence
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Places that seem to be designed without purpose or function are often referred to as liminal. My stance is that this interpretation of liminal spaces is connected with the productivity mania instilled by capitalism. We are conditioned to be concerned with the usefulness of spaces, and when a place is not used in the "right way," it appears "messy" and its unclear purpose becomes problematic. We then start perceiving it as something to be eradicated or as a creepy space we don't want to be associated with. Additionally, we may believe that such spaces are affiliated with unproductive individuals, reinforcing the (un)conscious discomfort.<br>
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Freud vs. De Martino
==<span style="padding-left: 0vw; padding-right:2vw; padding-top: 2vw; padding-bottom: 2vw; background-color:#FFC300; color: white; font-weight:bold; font-size:20px; font-family: Georgia, serif; letter-spacing: 0.3rem;">Liminal spaces and media</span>==
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===<big>'''Liminal horror'''</big><br>===
The Backrooms is a video creepypasta derived from a simple 4chan post ([https://archive.4plebs.org/x/thread/22661164/ here the original thread]), depicting a trap-like, maze-like, yellow prison.<br>
Horror typically places a monster in an unexpected location, but liminal spaces build tension through ambiguity. Being in a liminal space, where you feel you shouldn't be, makes you anticipate the possibility of encountering someone or something, causing you to doubt yourself and the reality of the space. This creates a slow-burn terror, with no relief because you can't identify a clear threat. The uncertainty makes your brain start to hallucinate potential dangers.<br>
From Kane Pixels' videos, the concept of liminality outgrew its original context, becoming a mainstream aesthetic phenomenon. The backrooms evolved from a simple concept into a rich source of internet creativity. Thousands were the interpretations of backrooms and countless were the entities and monsters that were created to live in them. A lore was born. The connection between the Backrooms and the stucture of "levels", take inspiration from video games.<br>
The popularity of backrooms and liminal spaces spread during the covid pandemic, which is probably not a coincidence. People felt as though they were living in a liminal spaces, zone, without a clear sense of the future, floating in uncertainty.<br>
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Liminal spaces and the state of constant change are two sides of the same coin, reminding us to seek comfort in transition. Life can be seen as a liminal space between birth and death.<br>
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=== '''the Dehistoricisation of the negative + Signorinelli''' ===
<img src="https://legendary-digital-network-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/22142353/Backrooms-horror-short.jpg" width=355px><img src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/6051793d0c5c911997546d5f/71cca8ca-4772-46ff-a4d0-a48d8fcbc3ff/Safest+backrooms+levels+updated+final.png" width=200px><img src="https://i.ytimg.com/vi/mylokaZudwA/hqdefault.jpg" width=265px>
 
*Kane Pixel's, the backroom, video frame
-you keep repeating stuff, cleancleanclean-
* typical tier list of "levels"
 
* surviving becomes the main aspect of backroom exploration, losing the liminal character
Dehistoricisation connected, from a philosophical and anthropological point of view, to the ''ethos of transcendence'' and the ''crisis of presence'', applied to subaltern cultures (cultural exclusivism, and hegemonic cultures) a concept that can also be re-actualised by associating it with alienation in Marx and in Feuerbach.  
 
'''How can dehistoricisation be extended to contemporary social phenomena? How to interpret the present rituals and its symbolic language?'''
 
Dehistoricisation is a protective occultation of the historicity of existence, where dehistoricisation means mystification/alienation from the present, from time and thus from History. Man 'makes history', constructs it, chooses what he wants to valorise, but when this capacity threatens the ethos, man, in order to protect himself, destorifies his 'making history' and institutes the mythical-ritual medium, thus dissociation from the present takes place. Through the mystification of history by the mythical-ritual symbol, man can escape the protruding situations, the unpredictable, the becoming. Man stands in history as if he were not there, finding refuge in a metahistorical plane, placed above it.
 
The dehistoricisation of the negative allows the universalisation of one's condition in a mythical-symbolic dimension, mediated by religion and ritual. Myth is narration, ritual is behaviour repeated with words and gestures of symbolic meaning. The whole then becomes a circuit aimed at resolving the crisis. When the negative prevails, there is a crisis, of existential misery simply called, in which the ethos of transcendence can no longer resolve the inner evil and pain transcends its own position, causing the individual to lose his conception of reality and the deconstruction of his own being.
 
The symbolic universes, which human groups have produced to date, have mostly had magical-religious cultural content. Magic and religion already rest on the idea of the existence of a transcendent world, which nourishes itself.
Religion is a 'protective technique mediating values', capable of creating regimes of protected existence, above chaos, to counter the risk of passing with what passes (Károly Kerényi). Kosmoi that are isolated from the larger kosmos that is history. Religion with its symbolic stratagems contrasts the unrelated dehistoricisation (clinical madness) with the institutional dehistoricisation of becoming, the creation of a unitary, limited and limiting cosmos, a beautiful enclosure full of flowers.
 
In contemporary societies that pretend to be secularised, the dehistoricisation of the negative through magical-religious symbolism has not disappeared, on the contrary, it is reinforced by the development of symbolic languages that invest the spheres of economics (symbolic, conspicuous consumption) of politics (apocalyptic-millenarian projects, but also the figure of the leader and his charisma), of recreation and leisure (popularity and its allure, group membership and conflict, narcissistic exhibitionism and the 'symbolic' achievement of success, protagonism, individual affirmation).
 
homogenised western society, now lacking in myth?
No, as humans able to use creativity to create new rituals in response to discomfort (e.g. covid time), no search for cure.
 
personal crisis vs. cultural crisis,
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===<big>'''Cinema'''</big>===
==='''Magic of the South'''===
 
crisis of the presence
ideology of the compromise
stiches and knots rituality symbolism
pagan catholic syncretism
 
ethnographic research about the still present cultural forms, visible in new configurations, apotropaic and religious practices adressing moments of crisis, or cultural revival s such as the one currently turning the magical misfortune of an unmamable, infested villages into touristic destinations. To clarify the extent to which there are still some continuities between magic and religion as discussed here and the mechanisms by which we face "crises of presence" in our modern society.
 
magic vs rationality as one of the greatest theme that gave rise to the western civilization.
From demonology to natural reinaissance magic.
Southern catholicism withh its notes of gaudiness and exteriority, with its particular ceremonial and ritualistic flourished.
Ceremonial magic, its psychological function. Links, passages, syncretisms, and compromises that connect extracanonical low magic with the modes of popular devotion and the liturgy's own official forms.
 
Jettatura ideology of compromise
not the same as fascinazione (dark binding)
 
 
low forms of of cerimonial magic, not only formed by relics of archaic rituals, that sharply reveal the structural and functional features of the magical moment refined and sublimated also present in catholicism, but also by the particular magical tone of southern catholicism, crudeness and elementary quality,
 
euro mediterranean folkloristic data, crisis of mourning, hegemonic until the advent of catholicism.
 
=== End of the world, cultural apocalypse ===
The apocalypse, unfinished work.
Entire peoples experience their own end of the world. America, scope of disaster, genocide and migration.
De martino trying to connect personal and cultural crisis in the western context. He gets political, Marxist apocalypse.
Apocalypses are experienced, upon the body, dimension of the crisis of presence (it is the fil rouge!) that is never experienced on an individual level but on a collective level, individual vs. collectivity returns, each crisis embedded in cultural context, embedded crisis.
Psychopathological crisis, schizophrenia, borderline, crisis of the world is degraded, fragmented personality, in this case individual. But is the face always the body?
There is always a lack of rooting in the world.
We have shaped ourselves over time through culture, social/biological interweaving.
 
Religious syncretisms.
Clara Gallini on land of remorse?
Giordana Charuty, De Martino bibliography,  french edition.
Silvia Mancini, De Martino metapsychic.
 
There is no culture in which man does not set himself against the outside world, so it is not only this evil of western culture, but it has certainly weaponised it.
Living in the time of catastrophes, among the ruin of capitalism (Tsing), thinking about that is clear how to apply De Martino analysis over the feeling of anguish that loom our lives today. <br>
https://www.amantropologiamedica.unipg.it/index.php/am/article/view/675/593 <br>
 
Not as individuals but as a society, after covid, few wars that fractured our western bubble, it could be interesting to study the rites we are celebrating to contain and exorcise apocalypse anxiety.
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The identification of presence is not to be taken for granted. It is a fragile, precarious conquest, which can continually shift. In the magical world, the shaman intervenes to resolve crises and to discipline them culturally, he performs rites for the community that involve the descent into the abysses of chaos and the return, the reintegration of the self. In magism there is the redemption of presence, unstable in people's lives, exposed to the disintegration of self, enduring catastrophes, famines, wars. Losing oneself is an anthropological risk in every age, including our own.
In "American Psycho," the liminality of light plays a significant role. Patrick Bateman struggles to escape the liminal nature of life itself. He seeks recognition from others to affirm his identity. Despite being a murderer, without others believing it, he cannot fully embody that identity. It's akin to a Schrödinger's cat situation—his status as a murderer is both confirmed and denied simultaneously. Without a validation from outside he doesn't know who he is. This lack of recognition plunges Bateman deeper into despair, even after he admits to his crimes. The uncertainty surrounding his identity and actions contributes to his existential crisis, highlighting the liminal nature of his world.<br>
Magism experiences are different from the relics of magical thinking that continually reappear in new forms influenced by unbridled consumerism and an absolute selfish individualism we all are influenced by.
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Tarkovsky is the artist of spiritual and emotional decay on screen.<br>
Long takes, deep focus cinematography, and an evocative sound design that mixes natural sounds with snippets of music and dialogue. Tarkovsky's films are known for their immersive and deeply symbolic presentation of liminal spaces, which blur the lines between reality and the subconscious. The Stalker is one of the masterpiece of Tarkovsky and is probably one of the best example of employing liminality both visually and thematically. The Stalker, so the guide is itself a liminal figure, suspended between two worlds, being the spiritual, almost shamanic figure that helps the others fulfilling their transformation.
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<small>“Può finire il mondo?”, scriveva De Martino, “chi così chiede e vaga col suo terrore di congettura in congettura, proprio perciò pone il finire del mondo, si immette nel corso del finire che non si trattiene più in nessun nuovo inizio, corre al termine sottraendosi all’unico compito che spetta all’uomo, cioè di essere Atlante, che col suo sforzo sostiene il mondo e sa di sostenerlo”.</small>  
===<big>'''Photography'''</big>===
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When we think of liminality, it's easy to find online images of hallways, bridges, mazes, and artificial environments like indoor playgrounds, malls, and various types of stations. Even abandoned places fit neatly into the digital depiction of liminality.
The feeling of alteration often experienced when viewing a photo of a liminal space stems from the fact that it has been taken out of its original context.
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<small>Le apocalissi contemporanee, che denotano un senso di disagio della civiltà occidentale senza prospettiva di rigenerazione, un finire senza palingenesi, lo ossessionavano. La civiltà occidentale ha dei limiti e delle ambiguità, può essere criticata, non demonizzata. Nella nostra cultura ci sono i buchi neri e le risorse per ricominciare e andare avanti. E questa ambivalenza va risolta ogni giorno, a ogni risveglio, dal campo psicoanalitico a quello culturale. In un processo senza fine, c’è storia finché c’è questo processo”. Domani è un altro mondo.</small>
Some popular photos of liminal spaces:
* Holiday Inn at terminal 4 of Heathrow Airport, London
* Asep Stroberi Kadungora, Jawa Barat, Indonesia
* Lantern of Madison, Assisted Living Facility, Ohio, US
* Sanatorium Ingul, Mykolaiv, Ukraine, even their website is liminal https://sanatoriy-ingull.wixsite.com/nikolaev
* Hamamatsu station, Japan
* Krusty Krab in Ramallah
* Google Data Center, Changhua, Taiwan


=spells, amulets=
<img src="https://www.seniorliving.com/sites/default/files/styles/flexslider_full/public/senior-community/1363979/original_2.png?itok=OSbtjXIG" width=355px><img src="https://avatars.mds.yandex.net/get-altay/374295/2a0000015b17252ce193e4f997955e529870/L_height" width=295px><img src="https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQGXSm9J8FG3Sj0QTFcHKQAyUZX4MhohFRYOg&s" width=125px><br>
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===<big>'''Digital art'''</big>===
* Pool rooms, made by Jared Pike
* Garielle Traversat collages
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===<big>'''Videogames'''</big>===
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2.22 am game the lack of purpose is the creepy aspect. It's a stretch to call it a game, what even is a game?<br>
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I enter my land dead, oozing with despair.
'''Super Liminal''' <br>
I can't really reabsorb anything here, unfortunately I breathe. I have to write everything down, if I write everything down, I will feel real Writewritewrite ritualsritualsrituals
In this mind-boggling puzzle game, the environment is itself the narrative. The engaging gameplay is the main element that made the game so famous. The game is aesthetically liminal, not really narratively liminal. <br>
 
Pillow Castle is quite famous for having worked on viewfinders that follow the same perspective-based mechanisms.<br>
=folklore=
 
==Femina - Coro a Coro, Canti e Incanti, Voci in Ascolto==
Apulia  gateway to the East, "porta d'Oriente", land of migrants, crossroads of men, of people who flee and then return. Discovering Coro a Coro would soothe anyone's wounds. it is interesting to discover how silently fervent the art scene in Salento really is.
I found myself in these meetings where many were young like me, all with their families rooted in the land, and they instead ran away, out of disappointment and need, free souls, weirdly nice people :)) I have never sung in my life, much less in a choir. I found myself singing in a dialect I do not speak, in Arabic, Albanian, Greek and in Italian, which seemed to me the most incomprehensible language of all.  
All in a circle, soothing the distances.
 
Celebration, ritual and healing. <br><br>
Introduction to Maquams, Mawashahat, rhythmic patterns and oriental singing. <br>
 
The Muwashah (plural of Muwashahat) serves as a vocal passage within the wasla, an integral part of the classical Arabic repertoire, a musical form born in Aleppo in the XVII century
 
==Alan Lomax, Eugenio Barba, Odin Teatret, ''The living archive''==
https://fondazionebarbavarley.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/LA-FLIS-LIVING-ARCHIVE-ITA.pdf <br>
https://fondazionebarbavarley.org/en/laflis/ <br>
Panofsky?
 
 
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<big><big>'''─── ・ 。゚☆: *.☽ .* :☆゚.・ 。゚☆: *.☽ .* :☆゚.・ ───'''</big></big>
'''The Stanley Parable'''<br>
 
Is an interactive comedy, a story made up of stories, a game about a game, an existential experimental riddle, a complex, quite surreal, loop<br>
 
=psychosis and spirituality, circles, social cognition=
 
=Jung approach, God image/God=
 
=Cults, the cabbalists, heretics, fear again=
<small>
The outlaw, the revolutionary, the cabbalist or member of a secret society, indeed heretics of all kinds are of a highly associative if not sociable disposition, and a certain element of play is prominent in all their doings. A play-community generally tends to become permanent even after the game is over. Of course, not every game of marbles or every bridge-party leads to the founding of a club. But the feeling of being "apart together" in an exceptional situation, of sharing something important, of mutually withdrawing from the rest of the world and rejecting the usual norms, retains its magic beyond the duration of the individual game. The club pertains to play as the hat to the head. It would be rash to explain all the associations which the anthropologist calls "phratria" -e.g. clans, brotherhoods, etc.-simply as play-communities; nevertheless it has been shown again and again how difficult it is to draw the line between, on the one hand, permanent social groupings, particularly in archaic cultures with their extremely important, solemn, indeed sacred customs-and the sphere of play on the other.</small>
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prey on the vulnerable, growth industry.<br>
===<big>'''Poetry'''</big>===
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Freedom of Mind by Steven Hassan<br>
“When I take you to the Valley, you’ll see the blue hills on the left and the blue hills on the right, the rainbow and the vineyards under the rainbow late in the rainy season, and maybe you’ll say, “There it is, that’s it!” But I’ll say. “A little farther.” We’ll go on, I hope, and you’ll see the roofs of the little towns and the hillsides yellow with wild oats, a buzzard soaring and a woman singing by the shadows of a creek in the dry season, and maybe you’ll say, “Let’s stop here, this is it!” But I’ll say, “A little farther yet.” We’ll go on, and you’ll hear the quail calling on the mountain by the springs of the river, and looking back you’ll see the river running downward through the wild hills behind, below, and you’ll say, “Isn’t that the Valley?” And all I will be able to say is “Drink this water of the spring, rest here awhile, we have a long way yet to go and I can’t go without you.”
Cults In Our Midst by Margaret Singer<br>
― Ursula K. Le Guin, Always Coming Home
Aleister Crowley - The Paris Working<br>
Alternative Spiritualities, New Religions, and The Reenchantment of the West by Christopher Partridge<br>
Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism by Robert Jay Lifton<br>
Esotericism in New Religious Movements by Olav Hammer<br>
Virtually Religious: New Religious Movements and the World Wide Web by Douglas E. Cowan and Jeffrey K. Hadden<br>
Something Peculiar about France: Anti-Cult Campaigns in Western Europe and French Religious Exceptionalism by Massimo Introvigne<br>
Egyptian Book of The Dead<br>
Witches, Wiccans, and Neo-Pagans: A Review of Current Academic Treatments of Neo-Paganism by Síân Lee Reid and Shelley Tsivia Rabinovitch<br>
https://ia802202.us.archive.org/35/items/ThoughtReformAndThePsychologyOfTotalism/Thought_Reform_and_the_Psychology_of_Totalism.pdf<br>
 
 
=false mystics, dualism, transcending the spiritual crisis=
=occult, aesthetic, media, boringness, violence=
=ritualised speech, language=
=ritual re‐actualizations, consumption =
=exorcising fear=
 
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<br>
='''algorithmic rituality'''=
==<span style="padding-left: 0vw; padding-right:2vw; padding-top: 2vw; padding-bottom: 2vw; background-color:#FFC300; color: white; font-weight:bold; font-size:20px; font-family: Georgia, serif; letter-spacing: 0.3rem;">Ritual</span>==
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One of the most famous studies about rituals was made by Victor Turner.<br>
In his The "Ritual Process", Turner challenges existing views by reinterpreting rituals as the basis for intellectual progress of humanity. Turner's theories were influenced by Arnold van Gennep's Rites of Passage.<br>
Neither van Gennep nor Turner were the first to study rituals in social contexts outside of specific ethnic groups. Durkheim, who focused on rituals as well, emphasise social power in rituals, arguing that society emerges from individuals and culminates in collective experiences during rituals, not the other way around. Turner also acknowledges that rituals reinforce the inherently social nature of humans, but argues that rituals are instead called during times of social crisis and structural failure, from this his theories of liminality and communitas (these dynamics can also apply to other basic human processes that are not immediately considered rituals but are taken as such in practice) were born, which emphasise sociality as the core of human behaviour and rituals as responses to crisis. Durkheim, on the other hand, focuses on the power of symbols used in rituals, and the reinforcement of their influence in any society.<br>
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https://www.manifattureknos.org/knos/ Sudestudio http://sudestudio.com/en/ https://www.pugliasounds.it/en/
==<span style="padding-left: 0vw; padding-right:2vw; padding-top: 2vw; padding-bottom: 2vw; background-color:#FFC300; color: white; font-weight:bold; font-size:20px; font-family: Georgia, serif; letter-spacing: 0.3rem;">Play</span>==


Jean Marc Caimi - Valentina Piccinini


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nR0GaHM4aMQ&ab_channel=LUCADePaolis https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UssmrM_uSxY&ab_channel=NottedellaTaranta (grico - italian/greek dialect)
==<span style="padding-left: 0vw; padding-right:2vw; padding-top: 2vw; padding-bottom: 2vw; background-color:#FFC300; color: white; font-weight:bold; font-size:20px; font-family: Georgia, serif; letter-spacing: 0.3rem;">References</span>==
 
<br>
Porte d'Oriente, Accademia di Belle Arti Lecce + Venezia https://boa.unimib.it/retrieve/e39773b6-9cdd-35a3-e053-3a05fe0aac26/phd_unimib_818149.pdf Bicocca study Land Art - Parco dei Giganti, Nardò, Ulderico Tramacere, Massimo Donati (mappatura digitale interattiva del Campo dei Giganti) Via Francigena salentina -- Via dell’Olio
✰⋆Guest Editorial by Bruce Kapferer 1, Victor Turner and The ritual process, ANTHROPOLOGY TODAY VOL 35 NO 3, JUNE 2019
 
Alfredo Panzini's Dizionario moderno ("Modern Dictionary") in 1950 Racism, xenophobia, Lombroso, Niceforo,
 
Progetti di Rigenerazione Urbana e Territoriale ReGerOP
 
Alan Lomax https://archive.culturalequity.org/collections?search_api_fulltext=&member_of_op=empty https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLcMrQhaQKY&list=PLjTm5BQoe47kvPq_WmNdkBvK5mYcDBAH2
https://land2.leeds.ac.uk/ritual-creativity-performance-contemporary-art-anthropology/
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1023/A:1005551410889
''Ontology formulated by integrating Merleau-Ponty's phenomenology, Yuasa Yasuo's Eastern-based phenomenology of the body, and Psychoneuroimmunology'' <br>
https://www.istitutoeuroarabo.it/DM/culti-extraliturgici-e-possessioni-aspetti-rituali-configurazioni-di-genere-nella-post-modernita/
<small>In each of these accounts of embodiment, the flesh is revealed as simultaneously consisting of presence and absence, ''incarnation and transcendence, being and consciousness. As a result, the Heideggerian approach to ethics, which is based upon the relationship we have with being, can be realized on many levels of embodiment. This makes the cultivation of a holistic ethos more feasible. Such an ethos overcomes the shortcomings in Heidegger's ethics and, in particular, those revealed by Levinas, Levin, Krell, and Caputo.''</small>

Latest revision as of 21:13, 31 May 2024

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Space vs Place


Each culture defines the concepts of space and place in a unique way. They take on almost fluid forms, taking the shape of the context in which they are applied like water in a container.
Space is multidimensional. It’s typically understood in terms of direction, volume, and distance, sp with a strong mathematical character, an abstract form.
Instead Place is much more relative, connected to a more personal perception and subjective experience of the world. A place holds significance, identity. Places are where people live and interact, making them rich with cultural and social meanings.
When thinking about space in a much more conceptual aspect, George Simmel is the first one popping up. Simmel worked on conceptualising space from a sociological point of view, being focused on its materiality and spatiality rather than treating it as a non material concept.
He explored how space shapes social relations and individual experiences around cities, markets, and how they function as hubs for social interactions connected to the negotiation of power between individuals.
A key point of Simmel’s theory is spatial differentiation. He argued that different social groups and individuals perceive and use space in different ways, always reflecting their own social status, cultural backgrounds, and personal identities. This differentiation can lead to spatial hierarchies and segregation.
Simmel emphasised that space is not static but constantly shaped by human activities.

Following these studies, Doreen Massey rethought the concept of space while calling attention to how spatial relations between people, cities, and actions are the main point of focus to understand power structures. She describes space as "unfixed, contested, and multiple," showing that places are dynamic, in a constant evolutionary state. Massey's perspective can be aligned with the ecological idea of the earth as a single breathing organism, which can be maybe understood as fractal in a sense, because of its interconnectedness.

Keith Basso introduces an interesting concept, interanimation, a process where people and places engage in an ecological relationship, creating a unique web of meaning. This dynamic that builds space make places seem alive even in the wildest stillness.

_ E un'immagine che descrive il processo di interanimation durante il quale il paesaggio geografico si sovrappone a quello mentale nel momento in cui un luogo viene sentito (sensed) in maniera attiva (107). "Un'oscura sete". Natura nella Milano di Milo De Angelis _

Transformation, Non-places, Deterritorialisation


Spaces become places when people use them and create a culture around that use, like a school or a bank. In modern societies the anthropologist Marc Augé called them "non-places", urban leftovers that sit between places. And so we all constantly transition from place to place, slipping through unseen non-places. Train stations, airports, and waiting rooms are great examples of non-places, places that are stripped of culture and interpersonal interactions.

J. Nicholas Entrikin, geographer, divides place into objective and subjective, fundamental aspects to be taken into account to understand liminality of spaces. He calls the betweenness of places the meeting point of subjective and objective space.

Henri Lefebvre, the marxist sociologist, challenged the classical binary interpretation of space, proposing the concept of "thirdspace," which connects spaces of living and spaces of leisure. To him a place is a physical and social landscape filled with meaning through everyday social practices, working across different spatial and temporal planes, it’s neither home nor workspace, nor space of sociality. That space we transit in, an hybrid, then what is the difference between a thirdspace and a non-place?

Deterritorialisation by Deleuze and Guattari.
When referring to culture, anthropologists use the term deterritorialized to refer to a weakening of ties between culture and place. This means the removal of cultural subjects and objects from a certain location in space and time.[9] It implies that certain cultural aspects tend to transcend specific territorial boundaries in a world that consists of things fundamentally in motion.

How to encounter a place, ecosystem


Massey describes places as constellations of trajectories, highlighting their porous, sponge nature. She argues against establishing severe boundaries or identities to places, as this can lead to nationalistic or attitudes. Instead, places should be seen for her as dynamic networks of events, constantly being reshaped.

To truly encounter a place, we must recognise that we are part of it. Throwntogetherness, actively participating and leaving traces that contribute to its ongoing form, narrative. Emmanuel Levinas' writings and the holistic, ecological, approach of deep ecology on humankind as an interlocking web of changing relations, offer a framework for the ethical engagement approach that some sociologists and geographers took inspiration from. This involves developing self reflection, awareness, getting almost to anthropomorphizing a place, to observing its behaviour thoughtfully, empathetically.

So, while being a complicated and unfixed set of networks, a place might also have the capacity to remember, to hold traces of past activities, in the loosest sense. While it remembers, it does not necessarily do this in a human way. The memory of place may then be thought of as fluid, transitory, and open-ended, activated only by those who pass through.

Place-specific art


Lucy Lippard, american writer and art critic, defines place-specific art as art governed by a place ethic, accentuating its location rather than just occupying, using it.
Examples of contemporary works that are place specific in Lippard’s sense:

  • John Newling’s 2010 Root Zone and Local History. https://www.john-newling.com/street-works
  • Lucy Harrison, how we experience place, memory, location, Remains project
  • Roger Hiorns Seizure installation, he filled a council flat in elephant and castle with copper sulphate solution and then rained it
  • Wrights and Sites’ Wonders of Weston 2010 Everything you need to build a town in here, 41 signs scattered across a variety of locations https://www.situations.org.uk/projects/wonders-of-weston/

http://www.mis-guide.com/
http://www.mis-guide.com/ws/people.html#phil
The metal plaques appear without explanation and offer instructions, observations or comments, which are designed to encourage the reader to somehow engage with their immediate vicinity by way of real or imagined actions. At the Old Town Quarry, which the artists describe as the keystore site for the series, there is a map and description of the project in its entirety. Not only does the work lead the visitor (tourist and resident alike) to unexpected places, but it also highlights the layering of historical and contemporary stories and associations that surround us everywhere

Counter-Tourism and site writing


Counter-tourism and site writing are great alternative perspectives on living with/in/against places, disrupting traditional tourist routes and attractions, encouraging deeper exploration of the experiential character of a location. Smith’s tours aim to reveal hidden layers of a place, inviting participants to engage with the urban landscape in unexpected ways.

Phil Smith, a member of the artistic collective Wrights & Sites, is an important figure in the world of counter-tourism and mythogeography (probably the main intellectual writing about these concepts).
His works, including "Counter-Tourism: The Handbook" and "Mythogeography," bibles for unconventional wandering into urban spaces.

Jane Rendell’s concept of "site writing" emphasises even more the role of narrative and personal engagement in encountering places. Her researches focus on everything concerning situatedness and site-specificity, exploring how writing can intersect with the experiential aspects of a space.


Landscape of the margin, haunted, rotting


Landscape refers to the visible features of an area of land, including its physical natural elements as well as all human made things such as houses, roads, and cultivated lands. Landscape unite both natural and human altered environments, it’s like space, but not abstract :).
Landscape as something that can be shaped, produced, influenced on human or natural actions and processes. As they are in a constant state of transition landscapes themself are intrinsically liminal.
Liminal landscape ad the one that are shabby, desolate, marginal, abandoned have been embraced in popular culture, mainly within subcultures thriving on the web, tied to urbex culture mania, thirsty for that sublime decay that permeate ruins, industrial abandoned sites, degraded lands, ‘dead zones’.


https://api.pageplace.de/preview/DT0400.9781136134364_A23812945/preview-9781136134364_A23812945.pdf

Shield's discussion about places on the margin is quite interesting. He focuses on margin and peripheries of Britain, exposing the image and stigma connected to marginality, the central role of “spatialisation” to cultures and national states. He followed the intimate link of the concept of space and the categorisation of practises and modes of social interaction connected to the so called “Low culture”.
Drawing on Orientalism, by Said, Shield highlights the concept of symbolic exclusion elucidating how the West employed strategies of "positional superiority" to assert dominance over marginalised groups, inside itself and outside through colonisation. Shield also references Strallybrass and White to show the eroticisation, fantasization and still repulsion of the top society to the low Other. This could be translated in a lot of ways, through different contexts.

Liminal landscapes are tinged with death, connected to transformation and processes of becoming, and with entropy,with its liminal flux made up of organic forms flowing and propagating, as into a body the vascular system branches out. Lichenous, constantly rotting. Entropy as radical impermanence.

The proliferation and celebration of liminal spatiality has become connected to the commercialization and intensifying social and political control of exactly such spaces, annulling their transformative potential while flattening our mental and physical landscapes. It is also this process that, far from deleting the playful and carnivalesque from the modern world, actually turns the world itself into a permanent carnival. This involves, as pointed out by Andrews (2009), a constant but often hopeless search for 'experience' (could it be connected to core??). In a world where an increasing number of people are in constant search for excitement and stimulation of the senses, boredom is always lurking around the corner. A carnival that never ends stops being fun; it turns into a mechanical role play. Liminality cannot and should not be considered an end point or a desirable state of being; when this happens, creativity and freedom lose their existential basis and turn into its opposites: boredom and a sense of imprisonment.

we need to turn to the concreteness of lived space

Mapping, navigating, regulations


How is then possible to navigate liminal spaces? Is there any different approach we could have on mapping liminal spaces? What are the mechanics and processes by which liminalities work or function in relation to landscape? What are the temporal geographies of liminal landscapes? What are the politics of liminal landscapes?

Liminal spaces, in military and territorial contexts, go against the traditional methods of control and mapping. Unlike conventional landscapes liminal spaces cannot be controlled or commanded in the same way. Instead, what they must be "invoked" (Moore, R.L. (1991) ‘Ritual, Sacred Space, and Healing: the Psychoanalyst as Ritual Elder’). This shows a more ritualistic approach to navigating liminal spaces, that indeed demands a different kind of knowledge, one derived not just from maps or commands but from direct engagement and ritualistic practices. Maps are a no no.
The liminal landscape of the border zone, for example, operates beyond laws and logic, challenging typical forms of knowledge. It creates conditions of urgency, emergency, necessitating the cultivation of a diy anarchic approach?
In such liminal spaces, where nothing moves while still changing, wanderers can lose sight of their path, even if that is a familiar terrain, highlighting the disorienting nature of these kind of spaces.
Improvise. Adapt. Overcome.

Van Gennep talks a bit about “territorial passage” in the past accompanied by various formalities that ranged from political, legal to those of a more magic religious type. Our contemporary neoliberal landscape is not even borderless as it sell itself. Mobility remains a privilege as it always was, accessible to some denied to many. Borders and restrictions continue to shape the movement of people, echoing the structured and ritualised passages of earlier times but within a modern framework of control and regulation.

Political, legal and economic formalities are now as likely to be used to prevent the free movement of a person from one place to another. Mediterranean sea, visas, migration policies.

Danger, unbelonging, the border


Never before in the history of the world have non-places occupied so much space. (Benko and Strohmayer 1997: 23)
Anything is now liminal?

the visa state of suspence, liminal state
Inhabiting the neutral zone between one territorialized state and another

To me this just feel as a privileged approach: Rogoff argues that "unbelonging" is not about feeling lost or lacking something, but rather about a deliberate, ongoing process of detachment to make way for new possibilities. She calls for an active form of "unbelonging," not as marginalization or rebellion, nor as a way of dropping out, but as a refusal to accept the terms and implications that become normalised in this kind of discourses.
I might have not fully understand her point.
To me unbelonging is most of the time an act that the individual is not fully conscious about, nor involved in, it’s something comes from the outside world, that digs into the consciousness of a person and sediment, in a way that just unbelonging becomes naturalised. To me that cannot be a choice, unbelonging as a choice is still belong to an idea, a movement at least.

The Border is a traditional landscape of transition, now it mirrors the global landscape shaped by global capital. The modern hyperconnected landscape is a constant flux of transition, embodying a state of perpetual liminality. The current era is characterised by an enduring of indeterminacy (still, why is that negative, as it is the most natural form of reality?), disorientation and limbo.
Bauman's concept of liquid modernity or liquid life encapsulates this condition where everything is disposable and perpetually in motion.

In fact, Turner notes how the turbulence and ‘topsy- turvy-dom’ of liminality was often used to reinforce stability in the post- liminal phase, where ‘reversal underlines to the members of a community that chaos is the alternative to cosmos, so they’d better stick to cosmos’ (Turner 1982: 41)
Modernity itself is a kind of permanent liminality: a continuous testing, a constant search for self-overcoming, an incessant breaking down of traditional boundaries, and an existential sense of alienation and loss of being-at-home that in the modern episteme establishes itself as normality (Szakolczai)

Liminality


Between-ness is the core concept of liminality.
Liminality, "limen”, threshold, the concept of being in-between, partially belonging to two worlds while not wholly fitting into either. A transitional metaphor.
Liminal spaces are related to the uses and practices of space in constructions of identity, particularly in the context of contemporary approaches to the study of space, place and mobility. Experiential landscapes associated with mobilities, such as border zones and transitional spaces, serve as fertile ground for exploring the ritual, performative, and embodied geographies that shape individual and communities’ identities. The emotional response to such spaces is where liminality truly manifests. It feels both otherworldly and familiar simultaneously. They possess an unsettling familiarity, feeling both open yet enclosed, safe yet unsettling, and artificial yet natural.
It is not one or the other but both at the same time and can be hard to describe because we want to describe it as only one of those things because the other contradicts it.

Liminal spaces are usually associated with a sense of discomfort. They feel frozen in time, mere husks that spell whispers of their own past. They are impersonal, surreal, part of an altered reality, ambiguous, they are perceived as deviations from the norm.

Humanity leaves behind places that are no longer relevant.
Places get their energy just by life being in them, they get alive by you being there. A space that is empty will collapse into a frozen condition and begin to deteriorate.

Liminal spaces evoke nostalgia because they lack specific details, allowing people to connect with them personally. You don't remember the specifics of every place you've been, but when you encounter an image of such a space, you try to associate it with your own experiences. This lack of detail is a key characteristic of liminal spaces, making them universally relatable and familiar in our hyperconnected world.
Liminal spaces, such as supermarkets, have similar structures across different countries, reinforcing this sense of universal familiarity.
Liminal spaces' features often include hyper-artificial elements, like plastic, old carpets, and the buzz of neon lights. These spaces can trigger repressed memories, often bringing childhood to mind. Searching for liminal spaces online frequently reveals images of places from childhood, blending nostalgia for the past with the realization that these moments will never be reclaimed.

In rethinking ideas of the liminal, even in an anthropological and sociological sense, it’s possible to uncover contemporary issues surrounding technology, surveillance and power structures, as well as postcolonialism overlooked dynamics.


'if these wall could talk they would say nothing'

Uncanny Valley


One of the concept that most of the time is associated with liminality is the "uncanny valley"
it's a fascinating concept often discussed in relation to human interaction with humanoid robots or computer generated characters, it concern the emotional response that this interaction evokes. Usually this emotional response appears as of an unsettling effect.
Masahiro Mori, a japanese roboticist proposed this concept in the '70. He proposed that as robots become more human like, there's a point where they appear almost, but not quite, human, which causes a negative emotional reaction in humans. This is because the slight imperfections or deviations from human appearance and behavior become more noticeable and unsettling as the resemblance increases.
The phenomenon has important implications for robotics, animation, and virtual reality, where artists and designers that want to create human like experiences must navigate through a delicate balance to avoid triggering discomfort in users.

When something is too different from what we're accustomed to, it can be easily dismissed as unrealistic or fantastical. However, when something comes very close to reality but has slight imperfections or deviations, it disrupts our expectations and can evoke a strong negative reaction. This is because our brains are constantly comparing incoming sensory information with stored patterns of what we consider normal or familiar.


  • A parrot in an uncanney valley situation
  • Cats, the live action💥, wasn't really appreciated
  • The Sonic Movie, less "terrifying" CGI Hedgehog after internet meltdown



The concept of "uncanny valley" can easily be applied to spaces as well. One of the most common example of uncanney valley liminal spaces are abandoned buildings, places with a sense of mystery that can definitely evoke feelings of dread and creepiness. This happens because of various factors, like an increased informational entropy (https://www.researchgate.net/publication/361850311_Structural_deviations_drive_an_uncanny_valley_of_physical_places, elaborate!) or lack of enviromental information?
When we enter an unfamiliar or abandoned space, our brains may struggle to make sense of the surroundings because they lack the contextual information we typically rely on to assess safety and predict outcomes.
Our perception of creepiness in environments is a complex web of sensory inputs, cognitive processing, and emotional responses. It's fascinating how our minds react to environmental cues in ways that shape our experiences of space and place.

The pillars of liminal space:

  • Disgust
  • Ambiguity
  • Lighting and occlusion
  • Social presence or absence



Places that seem to be designed without purpose or function are often referred to as liminal. My stance is that this interpretation of liminal spaces is connected with the productivity mania instilled by capitalism. We are conditioned to be concerned with the usefulness of spaces, and when a place is not used in the "right way," it appears "messy" and its unclear purpose becomes problematic. We then start perceiving it as something to be eradicated or as a creepy space we don't want to be associated with. Additionally, we may believe that such spaces are affiliated with unproductive individuals, reinforcing the (un)conscious discomfort.

Liminal spaces and media


Liminal horror

The Backrooms is a video creepypasta derived from a simple 4chan post (here the original thread), depicting a trap-like, maze-like, yellow prison.
Horror typically places a monster in an unexpected location, but liminal spaces build tension through ambiguity. Being in a liminal space, where you feel you shouldn't be, makes you anticipate the possibility of encountering someone or something, causing you to doubt yourself and the reality of the space. This creates a slow-burn terror, with no relief because you can't identify a clear threat. The uncertainty makes your brain start to hallucinate potential dangers.
From Kane Pixels' videos, the concept of liminality outgrew its original context, becoming a mainstream aesthetic phenomenon. The backrooms evolved from a simple concept into a rich source of internet creativity. Thousands were the interpretations of backrooms and countless were the entities and monsters that were created to live in them. A lore was born. The connection between the Backrooms and the stucture of "levels", take inspiration from video games.
The popularity of backrooms and liminal spaces spread during the covid pandemic, which is probably not a coincidence. People felt as though they were living in a liminal spaces, zone, without a clear sense of the future, floating in uncertainty.

Liminal spaces and the state of constant change are two sides of the same coin, reminding us to seek comfort in transition. Life can be seen as a liminal space between birth and death.

  • Kane Pixel's, the backroom, video frame
  • typical tier list of "levels"
  • surviving becomes the main aspect of backroom exploration, losing the liminal character



Cinema


In "American Psycho," the liminality of light plays a significant role. Patrick Bateman struggles to escape the liminal nature of life itself. He seeks recognition from others to affirm his identity. Despite being a murderer, without others believing it, he cannot fully embody that identity. It's akin to a Schrödinger's cat situation—his status as a murderer is both confirmed and denied simultaneously. Without a validation from outside he doesn't know who he is. This lack of recognition plunges Bateman deeper into despair, even after he admits to his crimes. The uncertainty surrounding his identity and actions contributes to his existential crisis, highlighting the liminal nature of his world.

Tarkovsky is the artist of spiritual and emotional decay on screen.
Long takes, deep focus cinematography, and an evocative sound design that mixes natural sounds with snippets of music and dialogue. Tarkovsky's films are known for their immersive and deeply symbolic presentation of liminal spaces, which blur the lines between reality and the subconscious. The Stalker is one of the masterpiece of Tarkovsky and is probably one of the best example of employing liminality both visually and thematically. The Stalker, so the guide is itself a liminal figure, suspended between two worlds, being the spiritual, almost shamanic figure that helps the others fulfilling their transformation.

Photography


When we think of liminality, it's easy to find online images of hallways, bridges, mazes, and artificial environments like indoor playgrounds, malls, and various types of stations. Even abandoned places fit neatly into the digital depiction of liminality. The feeling of alteration often experienced when viewing a photo of a liminal space stems from the fact that it has been taken out of its original context.
Some popular photos of liminal spaces:

  • Holiday Inn at terminal 4 of Heathrow Airport, London
  • Asep Stroberi Kadungora, Jawa Barat, Indonesia
  • Lantern of Madison, Assisted Living Facility, Ohio, US
  • Sanatorium Ingul, Mykolaiv, Ukraine, even their website is liminal https://sanatoriy-ingull.wixsite.com/nikolaev
  • Hamamatsu station, Japan
  • Krusty Krab in Ramallah
  • Google Data Center, Changhua, Taiwan



Digital art

  • Pool rooms, made by Jared Pike
  • Garielle Traversat collages


Videogames


2.22 am game the lack of purpose is the creepy aspect. It's a stretch to call it a game, what even is a game?

Super Liminal 
In this mind-boggling puzzle game, the environment is itself the narrative. The engaging gameplay is the main element that made the game so famous. The game is aesthetically liminal, not really narratively liminal. 
Pillow Castle is quite famous for having worked on viewfinders that follow the same perspective-based mechanisms.

The Stanley Parable
Is an interactive comedy, a story made up of stories, a game about a game, an existential experimental riddle, a complex, quite surreal, loop

Poetry


“When I take you to the Valley, you’ll see the blue hills on the left and the blue hills on the right, the rainbow and the vineyards under the rainbow late in the rainy season, and maybe you’ll say, “There it is, that’s it!” But I’ll say. “A little farther.” We’ll go on, I hope, and you’ll see the roofs of the little towns and the hillsides yellow with wild oats, a buzzard soaring and a woman singing by the shadows of a creek in the dry season, and maybe you’ll say, “Let’s stop here, this is it!” But I’ll say, “A little farther yet.” We’ll go on, and you’ll hear the quail calling on the mountain by the springs of the river, and looking back you’ll see the river running downward through the wild hills behind, below, and you’ll say, “Isn’t that the Valley?” And all I will be able to say is “Drink this water of the spring, rest here awhile, we have a long way yet to go and I can’t go without you.” ― Ursula K. Le Guin, Always Coming Home

Ritual


One of the most famous studies about rituals was made by Victor Turner.
In his The "Ritual Process", Turner challenges existing views by reinterpreting rituals as the basis for intellectual progress of humanity. Turner's theories were influenced by Arnold van Gennep's Rites of Passage.
Neither van Gennep nor Turner were the first to study rituals in social contexts outside of specific ethnic groups. Durkheim, who focused on rituals as well, emphasise social power in rituals, arguing that society emerges from individuals and culminates in collective experiences during rituals, not the other way around. Turner also acknowledges that rituals reinforce the inherently social nature of humans, but argues that rituals are instead called during times of social crisis and structural failure, from this his theories of liminality and communitas (these dynamics can also apply to other basic human processes that are not immediately considered rituals but are taken as such in practice) were born, which emphasise sociality as the core of human behaviour and rituals as responses to crisis. Durkheim, on the other hand, focuses on the power of symbols used in rituals, and the reinforcement of their influence in any society.

Play

References


✰⋆Guest Editorial by Bruce Kapferer 1, Victor Turner and The ritual process, ANTHROPOLOGY TODAY VOL 35 NO 3, JUNE 2019