19 septembre 2016
https://www.openedition.org/12554 , info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Jerrold Seigel, « Chapitre II. Putting bohemia on the map », Presses universitaires de Rennes, ID : 10.4000/books.pur.40207
The title at the head of this essay may seem to go against something I wrote in a book now more than twenty years old, namely that “bohemia cannot be charted, graphed, and counted, because it was never wholly an objective condition” But it fits well with something else I noted there, namely that locating bohemia on a map was a favorite activity of many who spoke about it in the days when both the name and what it described were new. For bohemia’s friends it was bounded by such things as work ...