Finding Our Feet by Charlotte Bates and Alex Rhys-Taylor
Railway Lands by Emma Jackson
1 Marchers and Steppers: Memory, City Life and Walking by Les Back
2 Seeing the Need: Urban Outreach as Sensory Walking by Tom Hall and Robin Smith
3 Desire Lines: Walking in Woolwich by Charlotte Bates
4 Keep Walking: Notes on How to Research Urban Pasts and Futures by Helena Holgersson
5 Walking Together: Understanding Young People’s Experiences of Living in Neighbourhoods in Transition by Andrew Clark
8 Air Walk: Monitoring Pollution and Experimenting with Speculative Forms of Participation by Jennifer Gabrys
10 Wild Walking: A Twofold Critique of the Walk-Along Method by Phillip Vannini and April Vannini
Walking W8 in Manolos by Caroline Knowles
Charlotte Bates is a Sociologist at the Cardiff School of Social Sciences, Cardiff University.
Alex Rhys-Taylor is a Sociologist at the Centre for Urban and Community Research, Goldsmiths, University of London.
Walking Through Social Research is a poignant collection of essays
that explores walking as immersion in city life. This rich and
compelling collection engages with issues of violence, speculation
and vulnerability, showing us how mis-steps, walk-alongs, air walks
and walking together reach and reveal urban complexities.
Suzanne Hall, Director of the Cities Programme, London School of
Economics and Political Science, UKBates and Rhys-Taylor offer an
exciting collection of essays that take us on a variety of walks
across a diversity of cities. This book is a timely contribution to
the field of urban studies as it offers multiple reasons of why the
practice of walking is essential to researching, knowing and
reflecting on urban life. The essays are a pure joy to read as they
offer a fine balance between theory, methods and empirical studies.
An inspiring and fascinating read.
Monica Degen, Senior Lecturer in Cultural Sociology, Brunel
University London, UK
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