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  1. Guy Debord 1957: Psychogeographic guide of Paris. An example of mapping of atmospheric unities of a city on the basis of ideas of the international Lettrist and Situationist movement.

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  3. "Guy Debord with Asger Jorn, Psychogeographic Map of Paris. The map uses fragments of Louis Bretez and Michel-Étienne Turgot 's Plan de Paris (1734–39), a tourist map of Paris. The map loosely follows the configuration of the 1939 ..."-- Data Visualization for Design Thinking (2017) by Winifred E. Newman. e. Wikipedia. Wiktionary. Shop.

  4. Leader of the Situationist movement, Guy Debord created the Psychogeographic Guide to Paris by cutting apart a conventional map of Paris and reconstructing it as a collage with arrows.

  5. Mar 11, 2015 · Situationist counter-maps are the product of drifts or dérives practiced by Guy Debord and his companions in post-World War II Paris.

  6. The atlas contains maps and visualisations of statistical data, covering history, physical geography, demography, economy, agriculture, industry, transport, tourism etc. It took five years and work of roughly 100 people under the direction of Jacqueline Beaujeu-Garnier and Jean Bastié (both became later presidents of the Société de ...

  7. DANGEROUS DAYS. Based on a true story. Screenplay by Guy de Beaujeu. In the dog days of WW2 the British prisoners of war held in Oflag XIIb in southern Germany are ordered to leave their POW camp for a destination unknown, rumoured to be Hitler’s redoubt at Berchtesgaden.

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