Mapping the forbidden

Mapping the forbidden is in itself forbidden. And in my understanding the most forbidden of everything forbidden is that which refuses to be categorized, that which is neither this nor that, ungraspable forces which do not sit still but hop capriciously about. Aristotle consequently knew what he did...

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Main Author: Gunnar Olsson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Geographical Society of Finland 2010-11-01
Series:Fennia: International Journal of Geography
Online Access:http://ojs.tsv.fi/index.php/fennia/article/view/2672/3454
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author Gunnar Olsson
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author_sort Gunnar Olsson
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description Mapping the forbidden is in itself forbidden. And in my understanding the most forbidden of everything forbidden is that which refuses to be categorized, that which is neither this nor that, ungraspable forces which do not sit still but hop capriciously about. Aristotle consequently knew what he did, when he between the two concepts of identity and difference inserted a third position called “the excluded middle”, a non-bridgeable gap which in the same figure unites and separates, liberates and imprisons; an unruly space located beyond the realm of conventional reason; a no man’s land of liminality which the well behaved must never enter. But Aristotle also argued that what one cannot do perfectly, one must do as well as one can.
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spelling doaj.art-d6d6e635a8ea45b9802b50b4b6c945012022-12-21T22:42:39ZengGeographical Society of FinlandFennia: International Journal of Geography0015-00101798-56172010-11-011881310Mapping the forbiddenGunnar OlssonMapping the forbidden is in itself forbidden. And in my understanding the most forbidden of everything forbidden is that which refuses to be categorized, that which is neither this nor that, ungraspable forces which do not sit still but hop capriciously about. Aristotle consequently knew what he did, when he between the two concepts of identity and difference inserted a third position called “the excluded middle”, a non-bridgeable gap which in the same figure unites and separates, liberates and imprisons; an unruly space located beyond the realm of conventional reason; a no man’s land of liminality which the well behaved must never enter. But Aristotle also argued that what one cannot do perfectly, one must do as well as one can.http://ojs.tsv.fi/index.php/fennia/article/view/2672/3454
spellingShingle Gunnar Olsson
Mapping the forbidden
Fennia: International Journal of Geography
title Mapping the forbidden
title_full Mapping the forbidden
title_fullStr Mapping the forbidden
title_full_unstemmed Mapping the forbidden
title_short Mapping the forbidden
title_sort mapping the forbidden
url http://ojs.tsv.fi/index.php/fennia/article/view/2672/3454
work_keys_str_mv AT gunnarolsson mappingtheforbidden