‘We do have a limitless reservoir of ignorance, but we also have conceptual confusions that new knowledge seldom helps relieve.’
Ian Hacking
‘We do have a limitless reservoir of ignorance, but we also have conceptual confusions that new knowledge seldom helps relieve.’
Ian Hacking
with Caterina Nirta
Abstract. In this article, we conduct an applied territoriology of Deptford, a town in south-East London, to highlight the peculiarities of ageing in place in the context of a changing neighbourhood. We look in particular at the intersection of ageing and public space, devising a phenomenological gaze onto places, with an eager ear towards the stories they tell – and sometimes, conceal. An exercise in trans-scalar thinking ensues, whereby large-scale urban trends are illuminated through the mundane and the ephemeral. The neighbourhood emerges as a ‘fold’ of potentially conflicting but actually coexistent turns, whereby an emplaced ‘generational time’ is crafted.
Keywords: ethnography of public space; urban ageing; walking as method; urban transformations; London
>>> draft available upon request