One Shot Story – Soulless Places

By Andrea Monti

Official brand stores are a powerful way to assert a company’s presence. They are a bold statement of strength and confidence. They send a message to the customers and to those who aren’t yet: look! whenever you go we’re there for you(r wallett).

Admittedly, when travelling abroad it is sometimes reassuring to find a ‘familiar’ place – a cafeteria, a fast food, an electronic gadget shop – where everything works ‘as it should’.

On the other hand, though, this strength has a serious downfall.

Where was this picture taken? Of course, you may guess the location from a few clues (for instance, it was likely taken in a small Italian town, the store was not an official one because of its small size and so on) but otherwise, it is as anonymous as any other of the same brand.

Now, imagine waking up in a street with the same cafeterias, the same fast food, the same electronics shop, the same pizzerias, the same cheap clothing and gadget chain… well you get the idea.

What is the point of travelling thousands of miles only to discover that you haven’t moved at all? Where are things, people, living styles that make you discover different views of the World and challenge your assumptions? How can you immerse yourself in a place when there is nothing that makes it peculiar?

These questions – and many others – are answered in Along the Road, a brilliant essay by Aldous Huxley that should be a mandatory reading for those who travel and even more so for those who don’t.

Although Huxley doesn’t talk about (travel) photography, his remarks about how to find interest things in the most diverse situations are inspiring and give a refreshed sense to the act of travelling and, therefore to photographing. The pervasiveness and the growth of anonymous official stores however, is making increasingly difficult to find a living spirit in places populated by soulless clones.

This is not a rant about the gone ‘good’ol times’ or the damage made by the consumerism economy. Markets’ rules follow (and at the same time, shape) people’s attitudes and decisions are taken accordingly. I’m fine with that. Nevertheless, the growing feeling of alienation is more and more disturbing, excerbated by the hundreds of thousands of same-looking pictures that flood the Internet and make the World look the same.

How can you feel the spirit of a place if ithere is none?

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About The Author

By Andrea Monti
My name is Andrea Monti. I’m an Italian free-lance journalist, photographer and – in my spare time – an hi-tech lawyer. The works I am more proud of are covering live jazz, pop and rock concerts for an Italian online music magazine and Opera and prose for a 200 years-old theatre. I also do sport photography mainly in athletics and fighting disciplines. You may find out more about me on https://andrea.monti.photography
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Comments

Ibraar Hussain on One Shot Story – Soulless Places

Comment posted: 17/04/2025

The homogenous monotony of conformism, globalization and corporate (read Bankster) control with the help of steering groups such as Tavistock, WEF and such to make everything change into what you have brilliantly portrayed here.
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Alastair Bell on One Shot Story – Soulless Places

Comment posted: 17/04/2025

I call it "The homogenised High Street".

The UK is terrible for it. Almost every high street of every town contains the same bland assortment of shops. What happened to all the interesting shops, cafes and bars that made going somewhere new a pleasure? You can find a Boots, Wetherspoons, Tesco, Asda or one (or more) of the myriad betting shop chains in just about every town.
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Tim Bradshaw replied:

Comment posted: 17/04/2025

What happened to them is that we didn't buy enough stuff from them and so they went out of business. It's lazy and easy to hypothesise some conspiracy theory (you are not doing so!), but it's wrong: those things died because we chose to let them die. You don't have to buy all your books from a huge online book store, or to buy everything else from that same store: you can buy them elsewhere and the price difference is small or zero. You don't have to spend almost all your time staring at a screen: you could go to a café or a pub or a cinema. But almost nobody will. It's us: we chose this hell, nor are we out of it.

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Ibraar Hussain replied:

Comment posted: 17/04/2025

"conspiracy theory". It isn't a conspiracy if the take over of Main Street / High Street is by the same corporate giants who also sell online and all have the same people in the boardrooms. "we" didn't choose to let them die, I certainly didn't. Mergers and acquisitions, push for online retailing, redevelopment, knocking down of any individuality to be replaced by the same monolithic ugliness World over isn't the fault of the "We".

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Gary Smith on One Shot Story – Soulless Places

Comment posted: 17/04/2025

Every day is a blessing and I'm happy to report that in my travels I've not experienced the sameness described. Of course, I don't visit Apple stores while traveling.
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Geoff Chaplin on One Shot Story – Soulless Places

Comment posted: 18/04/2025

Turn away from the shopping districts and you might find something different. In Japan it is the norm for small towns to have unique produce, sold only through local food markets and visitor centres but generally unavailable elsewhere in Japan. I think there is something similar in France. But commercialism is death to individuality, as you rightly point out.
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Bill Brown on One Shot Story – Soulless Places

Comment posted: 18/04/2025

This may be a sort of rant response. How many friends and family know that you create photographic or original work? Do any of them ask if you have anything that might suit their need before they go to the local big box store and purchase the dreck being sold there? I've purchased gallery art and local artisan work my whole life. Beautiful work elevates whatever environment it's displayed in. Everyone knows I do professional print production and museum quality finish out, matting, framing and such. I have excellent images of family members that would be beautiful as framed art. This has been going on long before the phone or computer screen turned people into zombies. It goes deeper than that. I haven't read Huxley so maybe he addresses this. Here in the States, this time of year, a lot of art festivals are going on. My recommendation is to find the nearest one and go purchase a piece of work from a living, breathing person. Talk to them a few minutes to learn a little about what inspires them. In the process you my find a new friend and a place with soul.
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