“For nomads, home is not an address, home is what they carry with them.”
(John Berger, Hold everything dear. p. 129)
simone, you had mentioned him before, and here he is, this weekend in beijing. i’m very curious to see how he would handle this multiculturalism, though i feel sorry for him that they’ve given him this horrible headline of ‘melting pot’. pity, but i don’t think i’ll make it back in time… talking about home is something always pertinent, and it’s funny i made images very similar to the one above for a project i did for school a long time ago about carrying and the double meaning of the dutch word ‘dragen’, which can mean ‘to carry’ and also ‘to wear’. i suppose where i would like to explore this time, moving away from homes within one’s body, is moreso about homes along lines, paths, flows or networks. talking about identity being very much also of one’s choosing, it’s interesting that the idea of home could rest in choices, and foremost, in possibility. [here’s a link to audio interview with Akram Khan about the piece]
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“the idea of home could rest in choices and in possibility”
choices and possibilities are one perspective. What is about the given identification? People, who experience “silent acknowledgment”, who want to experience sense of belonging to a community? How do we combine those two perspectives?