nomadism$507258$ - definitie. Wat is nomadism$507258$
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Wat (wie) is nomadism$507258$ - definitie

Psychical Nomadism

Nomadic pastoralism         
  • An ancient dry-stone structure of nomads on a mountain top overlooking Masouleh village, Gilan
  • A [[camel]] trader in [[Hargeisa]], [[Somaliland]].
  • Tuareg]] nomads in southern [[Algeria]]
  •  Reindeer milking in a forest; western [[Finnmark]], late 1800s
  • A boy herding a flock of sheep in [[India]]
  • nomadic pastoralists}}
  • Maasai]] cattle herder in [[Kenya]].
FORM OF PASTORALISM WHERE LIVESTOCK ARE HERDED IN ORDER TO FIND FRESH PASTURES ON WHICH TO GRAZE
Pastoral nomad; Pastoral nomads; Nomadic pastoralists; Nomadic pastoralist; Nomadic pastoral; Pastoral Nomadism; Nomadic pasturing; Pastoral nomadism
Nomadic pastoralism is a form of pastoralism in which livestock are herded in order to seek for fresh pastures on which to graze. True nomads follow an irregular pattern of movement, in contrast with transhumance, where seasonal pastures are fixed.
Psychical nomadism         
Psychical nomadism is a philosophical term that refers to the practice of taking as one needs from any moral, religious, political, ethical, or whatever system, and leaving behind the parts of that system found to be unappealing.
nomadic         
  • Beja]] nomads from [[Northeast Africa]]
  • Starting fire by hand. [[San people]] in Botswana.
  • An 1848 [[Lithograph]] showing nomads in [[Afghanistan]].
  • Hungary]], 19th century.
  • Gurvan Saikhan Mountains]]. Approximately 30% of [[Mongolia]]'s 3 million people are nomadic or semi-nomadic.
  • Romani]] mother and child
  • Pashtun]] nomads in [[Badghis Province]], [[Afghanistan]]. They migrate from region to region depending on the season.
  •  Nomads on the [[Changtang]], [[Ladakh]]
  • Cuman]] nomads, [[Radziwiłł Chronicle]], 13th century.
  •  Rider in [[Mongolia]], 2012. While nomadic life is less common in modern times, the horse remains a national symbol in Mongolia.
  • date=2008-09-23}}</ref>
  • [[Sarmatians]], [[Saka]], [[Yuezhi]], [[Xiongnu]] and other nomadic pastoralists}}
PEOPLE WITHOUT A FIXED HABITATION
Nomads; Nomadic people; Nomadic tribes; Nomadism; Nomadic tribe; Semi-nomadic; Nomadic band; Primitive nomadism; Nomadic culture; Nomadic; Seminomadic; Semi nomadic; Nomadic People; Peripatetic minority; Mounted nomads
1.
Nomadic people travel from place to place rather than living in one place all the time.
...the great nomadic tribes of the Western Sahara.
ADJ
2.
If someone has a nomadic way of life, they travel from place to place and do not have a settled home.
The daughter of a railway engineer, she at first had a somewhat nomadic childhood.
ADJ

Wikipedia

Psychical nomadism

Psychical nomadism is a philosophical term that refers to the practice of taking as one needs from any moral, religious, political, ethical, or whatever system, and leaving behind the parts of that system found to be unappealing.

It is one of the main characteristics of the Temporary Autonomous Zone by Hakim Bey, but the notion was previously discussed by Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari in Nomadology: The War Machine, by Jean-François Lyotard in Driftworks and by various authors in the "Oasis" issue of Semiotext(e).

Psychic nomadism facilitates the construction of ad hoc reference frames in which to situate the temporary actions required by TAZ.

Bey in his essay explains why he chose the name:

"We use the term "psychic nomadism" here rather than "urban nomadism," "nomadology," "driftwork," etc., simply in order to garner all these concepts into a single loose complex, to be studied in light of the coming-into-being of the TAZ."

He states that there is a paradox where our modern society’s false unity blurs all cultural diversity and any place is as good as another.

Bey describes psychic nomadism's tactical qualities along with Deleuze and Guattari's sensibilities about the war machine:

“These nomads practice the razzia, they are corsairs, they are viruses; they have both need and desire for TAZs, camps of black tents under the desert stars, interzones, hidden fortified oases along secret caravan routes, 'liberated' bits of jungle and bad-land, no-go areas, black markets, and underground bazaars.”

Bey also discusses these nomads in terms of the Internet and cyberspace. His poetry foreshadows ideas that appear in CAE’s The Electronic Disturbance and later in electronic civil disobedience. With the words “cyberspace” and “hallucination” used interchangeably, we can see William Gibson's cyberpunk novel Neuromancer (1984) being combined with Deleuze and Guattari.

“These nomads chart their course by strange stars, which might be luminous clusters of data in cyberspace, or perhaps hallucinations. Lay down a map of the land; over that, set a map of political change; over that, a map of the Net, especially the counter-Net with its emphasis on clandestine information-flow and logisitics - and finally, over all, the 1:1 map of the creative imagination, aesthetics, values. The resultant grid comes to life, animated by unexpected eddies and surges of energy, coagulations of light, secret tunnels, and surprises.”