What the Promenade RemembersA morning walk, a small act, and the quiet difference between what we notice and what we leave behind.
The light on the East River in the early morning is different from the light anywhere else on the Island. It comes in low and sideways, catching the water in long, uneven flashes. On certain days it makes the promenade feel less like a walkway and more like a corridor someone once meant to finish but never quite did. When I was younger I found the suggestion to stop and look at it faintly ridiculous. New York is not a city that rewards stopping. The moment you pause, someone assumes you’re a tourist, and no one wants to be seen as that. This island, though, was laid out differently. It was designed with the expectation that a person might stand still without losing their place in line. There are fewer benches now than there once were. I used to think “stop and smell the flowers” was for people who didn’t have anywhere important to be. Now I realize it’s for people who finally noticed they’ve been walking past the same dead plant for fifteen years. The path itself has changed in quieter ways. The railings that once ran along the water’s edge rusted through and were replaced without ceremony. The benches that used to face the wrong direction were eventually turned around, though no one seems to remember when. What remains is the sense that the ground underfoot is still negotiating its own upkeep. The smell of urine-soaked soil rises in patches where the custodians have not yet reached. Small heaps of dog waste sit flattened into the surface. On the Queens-side stretch the garbage accumulates in low, stubborn piles, not dramatic enough to photograph, only persistent enough to become part of the scenery. It is easy to tell oneself that people did not used to throw things down so casually, but that is the kind of sentence every older person learns to distrust the moment it forms. What feels different is not the presence of litter but the absence of the old reflex that once made leaving it feel like a small public failure.
What the bins reveal is stranger still. There are more of them now than there used to be, yet the ground around them is rarely clean. In Japan the bins were scarce and the pavement stayed spotless; here the bins stand waiting and the debris gathers anyway. The difference is not access but ownership. The mess belongs to no one in particular, and therefore to no one at all. The Other StretchA few hundred yards later the feeling grew heavier. This is the part of the promenade where the Island sends its garbage to die quietly. On the main stretch the trash at least gets noticed before it’s removed. Here it simply settles in, like an unwelcome relative who’s decided to stay. The path on the Queens side, the stretch that curves away from the tram and the main promenades, was carrying its own evidence. Not the dramatic kind. Not the kind that photographs well for a report. Just the steady accumulation of what people had decided did not require their attention: a flattened cup, a torn wrapper, a scattering of small, unnameable things that had been stepped over often enough to become part of the surface. This is not a tourist stretch. The people who walk here are the ones who live here. There is no one else to blame for the state of it, and that is what makes the mess feel heavier rather than lighter. I have lived long enough to know that dirt is rarely the real problem. The problem is the quiet agreement that someone else will eventually handle what we have chosen not to. On the main promenades the bins are visible and the foot traffic is constant, so the small failures are corrected before they can settle. On the Queens side the bins stand empty because the people walking past them have already decided this is not their concern. The failures are allowed to remain because the audience is smaller and the consequences feel more private. It is the part of the Island that belongs most completely to its residents, and therefore the part that most clearly reveals what those residents have decided is beneath their notice. A pizza box, left upright on a bench, appeared to be conducting its own quiet experiment in how long the path would tolerate its company. The pizza boxIt was an ordinary morning. I was walking the Queens-side stretch with the modest intention of checking on the pizza box I had been observing for three days. I wanted to see how it had weathered the night and whether the path had grown any less tolerant of its presence. Three responses had occurred to me when I first noticed it. I could have written a small story about the kind of person who leaves a box behind after enjoying a view. I could have removed it myself. Or I could have continued to note its persistence each morning. I had chosen the third. Before I reached the bench I saw a Japanese couple ahead of me. The man had already gathered a few scattered wrappers from the edge of the grass. The woman, a few steps behind him, held two empty bottles by their necks. She did not call out. She only lifted her chin slightly in the direction of the bench. He turned, saw the box, and without breaking stride or asking a question, collected it with the rest. Three days. That’s how long it took me to develop feelings for a piece of cardboard. They walked together to the bin. The motion was ordinary, almost absent-minded. No one watching would have guessed that anything of note had happened. The box disappeared. The bench was empty again. They continued along the path as if the small correction had been the most natural thing in the world. I remained where I was. The judgment I had carried about the box now sat differently, but so did something else. Over three mornings I had grown oddly attached to its presence. That box sat there like it was waiting for me to make a decision. Turns out it was waiting for someone with less complicated feelings about public responsibility. I had chosen to watch. They had chosen to act. The bench was clean, and I was left with the sense that something had been settled without my consent, though I could not say whether the loss belonged to the box, to the path, or to me. What We Decide to KeepThe couple with the bin had already disappeared around the bend. I did not know their names. I do not know whether they live in one of the northern towers or in The Octagon, which still carries different memories in its hallways. What I know is that they treated the path as if it were an extension of their own floor. That is a particular kind of ownership. It does not require a deed or a vote or a committee. It only requires the willingness to bend down when no one is asking you to. There is a particular kind of courage required to pick up someone else’s mess in public. The rest of us save our courage for complaining about it later. I kept walking. The light on the water had shifted again, turning the surface into something harder to read. I thought about all the mornings this promenade has absorbed without comment: the arguments that happened while people stared at the skyline, the quiet decisions made while watching the current, the small mercies performed when the only witness was the river itself. The Island keeps its own record of these things. It does not publish the minutes, but it does not forget them either. Some days the path tells you what kind of place this still is. Other days it asks you what kind of place you are willing to let it become. If you see them, say thank you, not from yourself, but from the soul of the island. This newsletter travels best hand to hand. If you know someone who would read this all the way through, they are probably who it is for.
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Friday, 12 June 2026
What the Promenade Remembers
Are we entering a digital "dark age"? Or: talking to "other" people (1)
Organizational History Network is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Are we entering a digital "dark age"? Or: talking to "other" people (1)Making your research relevant to other disciplines and fields
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Last week I gave a talk at the Modern British Studies conference in Birmingham. Yes, I also didn't know British Studies was a thing before I was approached. I’ve only been to African Studies conferences before, so I was tickled. My stuff is only British insofar as I am located in Britain. But I was interested because it was about email and the internet, so the history actually overlaps with the time period I have been in Britain. My earliest internet and email were in Germany, but by the time MP3 players and social media became a major thing, I was on these fair isles. Pretty much shortly after we learned that Y2K would not end all civilisation as we knew it, really. (I was at HBS when Lehman Brothers collapsed (which is why I nearly missed the Northern Rock bank run), but back when the depression and austerity started.) To give you an idea of how long that is, consider this: when I am in Germany, I unironically expect trains to be on time. Yes, that long. Back to (Modern) British Studies — in many ways, it was like other area studies meets. I met a lot of historians, a smattering of vaguely sociological people and those with a penchant for literature and culture. Our panel was great: Christine Grandy (Lincoln) talked about her research on email spam — inspired! People (and journalists) were ominously forecasting the death of the internet and email as we know it, c. 2002. It was good to be reminded. Especially of the many Nigerian princes in distress. When I check my spam folder now, it’s a mix of advertising and threatening emails about my online watching habits (really, I’m the wrong mark here). So, quick check: yes, the internet still feels like a darker place now, but my nostalgia has significantly reduced. Laura Carter (Paris) reflected on Friends United and her “lurking” in online fora to research the history and memories of a cohort from a specific school. She did announce her presence as a researcher, but she is not an actively engaged participant in these mnemonic communities. It’s what Massa & O’Mahony (2021) call “non-participant observation” — worth knowing they did it on 4Chan. Ideal place to lurk — or maybe not. One attendee told me that my talk was very helpful, as he had now decided against touching any digital sources. I guess any impact is impact, no? I was also massively upstaged by some pigeons moving into Muirhead Tower. Definitely one of the more exciting talks to deliver. But overall, attending a conference outside my field made me consider how we can make our research relevant to scholars in other fields and disciplines, and how many of our concerns may be shared but divided by different languages and conventions. And I am doing it all again this week! Let’s get started with email and its past and future history. My talk had the deliberately melodramatic title: digital cornucopia, or new dark ages? It was aimed at historians and other scholars thinking about how anyone will write the history of the twenty-first century. But the argument matters just as much for those of us who study organisations, firms and management, because not just the corporate record is changing under our feet, but organizational activity itself is, and most of us have not yet noticed...
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What the Promenade Remembers
A morning walk, a small act, and the quiet difference between what we notice and what we leave behind. ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ...
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