Site research exercise. Pair with Mapping: Paths & Points
Choose an area to map. Move through the space, notating as a layer, its venues of language. A “venue of language” means a location or threshold that language comes through. This might be spoken language, whether pre-recorded (“the moving walkway is coming to an end”), formal (a greeter in a store, an exchange with a bus driver, cashier, or ticket agent) or a likely spot to hear unscripted speaking (in old days, a payphone, smokers clustered outside bars, people talking on their phones waiting in line for the grocery store to let them in…).
It might be written or symbolic language— formal (street signs, traffic signs, air raid shelter signs, addresses, don’t let your dog poop on the grass signs), informal (lost dog and garage sale fliers or placards, lawn signs, graffiti tags, Andre the Giant stickers), or accidental/temporary (messages written in the dust on dirty car windows, parking tickets, dropped sheets of paper).
The idea is to map not only what language exists in the site that your walk, if sited here, might interact with, but also to generate a roster of ways to think about how layers of language operate in any site.
Further/Followup
(1) Write for five minutes about the interaction of language, sound, and silence in the audio walk you want to write.
(2) List five to ten ways you might engage language in your walk, other than through the venue of the listener’s headphones.