Wanderlust: A History of Walking (2001)
Source: Storming the Gates of Paradise: Landscapes for Politics
Context: Walking has been one of the constellations in the starry sky of human culture, a constellation whose three stars are the body, the imagination, and the wide-open world, and though all three exist independently, it is the lines drawn between them—drawn by the act of walking for cultural purposes—that makes them a constellation. Constellations are not natural phenomena but cultural impositions; the lines drawn between stars are like paths worn by the imagination of those who have gone before. This constellation called walking has a history, the history trod out by all those poets and philosophers and insurrectionaries, by jaywalkers, streetwalkers, pilgrims, tourists, hikers, mountaineers, but whether it has a future depends on whether those connecting paths are traveled still.
“The present rearranges the past. We never tell the story whole because a life isn't a story; it's a whole Milky Way of events and we are forever picking out constellations from it to fit who and where we are.”
Source: The Faraway Nearby
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Rebecca Solnit 45
Author and essayist from United States 1961Related quotes
On the past and prejudices in “David Chariandy: ‘To make sense of prejudice, tell the story of the past’” https://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/apr/14/david-chariandy-ive-been-meaning-to-tell-you-father-advice-to-daughter in The Guardian (2019 Apr 14)
“The past is just a story we tell ourselves.”
Source: her
Chantal speaking of the cook, Madame Fernande, p. 119
La joie (Joy) 1929
“We may not know the whole story in our lifetime.”
On the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, quoted in Minute by Minute (1985)
Undated
“The sense of not having the whole story that comes from living close up to traumatic events.”
"R.B. Kitaj" (1981)
Nothing If Not Critical (1991)