What about Psychogeography?

 

"Psychogeography: a beginner’s guide. Unfold a street map of London, place a glass, rim down, anywhere on the map, and draw round its edge. Pick up the map, go out into the city, and walk the circle, keeping as close as you can to the curve. Record the experience as you go, in whatever medium you favour: film, photograph, manuscript, tape. Catch the textual run-off of the streets; the graffiti, the branded litter, the snatches of conversation. Cut for sign. Log the data stream. Be alert to the happenstance of metaphors, watch for visual rhymes, coincidences, analogies, family resemblances, and the changing moods of the street. Complete the circle, and the record ends. Walking makes for content; footage for footage."

(Robert Macfarlane, ‘A Road of One’s Own: Past and Present Artists of the   !Randomly Motivated Walk’’, Times Literary Supplement, 7 October 2005, 3-4, p. 3)

Although the term and the concept of "Psychogeography" were born in the 1950s, I find myself comfortable with this statement by MacFarlane, dated 2005. 

It is always complex, in the face of a term that expresses a concept or a current of thought, to find its application practice. 

I will insert this statement in my personal "instruction booklet", which will accompany me on my "psycho-geographic missions" in places that, however, do not need to be delimited by the rim of an overturned glass.