
An early exercise in the Agincourt Project asked students to map a place — where they live, where they grew up, a favorite place they visited as children — but to map it as an experience other than visual. How would they describe their hometown as an acoustic encounter? Or an olfactory one? Many of my childhood memories involve the smells of home: the Argo Plant of the Corn Products Co. (a stench that had become so familiar we didn’t notice it); a local bakery run by a Hungarian refugee from the ’56 uprising; and if the wind was wrong, the aroma of the sewage treatment plant across the river. If it were an acoustic map, the examples would generate something quite different.
Pavement in Midwestern American small towns have become fairly uniform. But at one time it might have varied from one block to the next, both sidewalks and street pavement.
