"Perhaps the truth depends on a walk around a lake." This line from Wallace Stevens' "Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction" captures something of the mysteries of walking. It points to the undeniable yet baffling relationship between walking and thinking, between putting one foot in front of the other and uncovering the secret of the soul and world. In this episode, JF and Phil exchange ideas about the weirdness of this thing most humans did on most days for most of world history. The conversation ranges over a vast territory, with zen monks, novelists, Jesuits and more joining your hosts on what turns out to be a journey to wondrous places.

Header image by Beatrice, Wikimedia Commons

REFERENCES

Dogen, The Mountains and Waters Sutra

Weird Studies listener Stephanie Quick on the Conspirinormal podcast

Weird Studies episode 51, Blind Seers: On Flannery O'Connor's 'Wise Blood'

Lionel Snell, SSOTBME

Henry David Thoreau, "Walking"

Arthur Machen, "The White People"

Herman Melville, Moby Dick

Vladimir Horowitz, Russian panist

Gregory Bateson, cybernetic theorist

The myth of the Giant Antaeus

Wallce Stevens, "Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction"

Deleuze, Difference and Repetition

Michel de Certeau, The Practice of Everyday Life

John Cowper Powys, English novelist

Will Self, English writer

Guy Debord, The Society of the Spectacle

Arcade Fire, “We Used to Wait”

Paul Thomas Anderson (director), Punch Drunk Love

Viktor Shklovsky, Russian formalist

Patreon blog post on Phil’s dream

David Lynch (director), Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me

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