Abstract

Debates in cultural geography around ideas of atmospheres have been considerably enriched in recent years by engagement with the literature on ambiances particularly associated with the Centre de recherche sur l'espace sonore et l'environnement urbain (CRESSON). Those working on both atmospheres and ambiances are concerned, among other things, with how places feel. In the ambiances literature, however, there is much greater emphasis on undertaking active interventions with the intention of re‐engineering the feeling of urban spaces. This paper reflects on a collaborative intervention undertaken by a cultural geographer and a professional poet. Methodologically we report on a novel extension to the idea of the urban transect as it has been deployed by scholars at CRESSON. Rather than simply recording the feeling of urban places for later analysis, we develop the use of an arts‐based intervention to actively manipulate urban ambiances in the field. We thus respond to Augoyard’s notion that artists alter ambiances through their creative practice, but we do so in a more democratic manner, asking non‐artists to engage with poetry as a means of remaking the immediate feeling of places. The analysis of this exercise presented here is comprised of both conventional academic and poetic writing. We conclude that the ambiances literature provides a powerful rationale for engaging in more activist collaborations between artists and scholars seeking to improve the feeling of places in partnership with residents.

Highlights

  • The notion of affect has received considerable critical attention from geographers and others during the last two decades

  • In more recent years these debates have been used as the starting point for a consideration of atmospheres, which Anderson describes as ‘a kind of indeterminate affective “excess” through which intensive space-times can be created’ (2009, 80)

  • Pre-dating these more recent debates on atmospheres, ideas around ambiances have been developing rapidly in the last decade, emerging primarily from a French literature associated with the Centre de recherche sur l’espace sonore et l’environnement urbain (CRESSON), based in the School of Architecture in Grenoble

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Summary

Introduction

The notion of affect has received considerable critical attention from geographers and others during the last two decades (among many others, Massumi 2002; McCormack 2003; Thrift 2008; Pile 2010). In more recent years these debates have been used as the starting point for a consideration of atmospheres, which Anderson describes as ‘a kind of indeterminate affective “excess” through which intensive space-times can be created’ (2009, 80). Pre-dating these more recent debates on atmospheres, ideas around ambiances have been developing rapidly in the last decade, emerging primarily from a French literature associated with the Centre de recherche sur l’espace sonore et l’environnement urbain (CRESSON), based in the School of Architecture in Grenoble. Paul Simpson and Peter Adey are perhaps the most prominent UK geographers developing ties to the team at

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