Friday, May 15, 2009

Towards a Psychogeography of the Long-Haul Flight: Part 2

Travel writing tends to the exotic. It seeks out the exotic and it creates the exotic. Its focus is on the destination, rather than the means of getting there. Whether a guide book, magazine or newspaper pull-out section, the destination is viewed in terms of the "new" - an exclusive discovery or a unique encounter. Travel writing avoids travel-itself. Travel-itself is ignored because it is boring. It is not directed to some exotic finale, but is the stuff of common experience; the commute to work, the packed train, the long flight, the isolated car. A psychogeorgraphy of the long-haul flight would turn to this underrepresented and basic human experience. The banality is precisely the subject. A psychogeography of the long-haul flight will exchange the exotic for the banal. The exotic is an escape, but the banal is a confrontation.

1 Comments:

Blogger markisapayne said...

I had an interesting short-haul flight the other day on the way home from Moscow. The flight stewardess lady decided to do her job in the most over the top fashion. Asking us constantly if we were happy and wanted anything. Which meant she plied us with free alcohol and gave us lots to put in our bag to take home. We thought she was trying to be amusing to keep us entertained, but everytime we laughed when she asked us something else she didn't seem to understand why we were laughing, which made it even funnier.

10:55 AM  

Post a Comment

<< Home