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articles

Walking Women: Shifting the Tales and Scales of Mobility

Pages 224-236 | Published online: 24 May 2012

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (19)

Elizabeth Philps. (2023) GPS Embroidery: walking as re-articulation of the written maternalised landscape. Research in Drama Education: The Journal of Applied Theatre and Performance 28:4, pages 527-546.
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Miren Urquijo. (2023) Walking ethnography: the polyphonies of space in an urban landscape. Journal of Cultural Geography 40:2, pages 143-161.
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Victoria Bianchi. (2022) Bring me a Souvenir: performing Herstory on Ayr beach. Studies in Theatre and Performance 42:1, pages 47-67.
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Emma Arnold. (2021) Sexualised advertising and the production of space in the city. City 25:5-6, pages 570-589.
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Elizabeth Philps. (2021) Just to get out of the house: a maternal lens on suburban walking as arts practice. Journal of Cultural Geography 38:2, pages 286-305.
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David M Brown, Sharon Wilson & Tom Mordue. (2020) Using hike-along ethnographies to explore women’s leisure experiences of Munro bagging. Leisure Studies 39:5, pages 736-750.
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Alison Bartlett. (2020) Feminist heritage walks: materialising the feminist past in Perth, Australia and Glasgow, UK. Gender, Place & Culture 27:7, pages 1007-1022.
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Harriet Tarlo & Judith Tucker. (2019) Cross Multi Inter Trans: a contextual introduction. Green Letters 23:3, pages 219-230.
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Jayne Lloyd. (2019) Wandering in care homes: the role of artists in reimagining walking performed by people living with dementia. Research in Drama Education: The Journal of Applied Theatre and Performance 24:1, pages 23-37.
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Stephen Greer. (2018) Gender Drift. Performance Research 23:7, pages 63-71.
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David Pinder. (2018) Transforming Cities. Performance Research 23:7, pages 18-28.
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Blake Morris. (2017) The Walking Library: relating the landscape. Green Letters 21:3, pages 287-299.
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Deirdre Heddon & Misha Myers. (2017) The Walking Library: Mobilizing books, places, readers and reading. Performance Research 22:1, pages 32-48.
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Hannah Macpherson. (2016) Walking methods in landscape research: moving bodies, spaces of disclosure and rapport. Landscape Research 41:4, pages 425-432.
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Mary Paterson. (2016) Don’t mistake publications for endpoints: a walking interview with Deirdre Heddon. Theatre, Dance and Performance Training 7:2, pages 302-312.
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Laura Bissell. (2016) Water matters: TUG onboard and TUG footpath. Studies in Theatre and Performance 36:2, pages 177-190.
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Tim Edensor & Hayden Lorimer. (2015) “landscapism” at the speed of light: darkness and illumination in motion. Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography 97:1, pages 1-16.
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Articles from other publishers (21)

Louise J. Lawrence. (2023) ‘Take Up Your Mat and Walk’: [Dis-] Abled Bodies of Communication and Early Christian Wandering. Biblical Theology Bulletin: Journal of Bible and Culture 53:4, pages 263-271.
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Emmanouela Mandalaki. (2023) Breaking the plaster: Making do with the fr agility of the body . Gender, Work & Organization 30:4, pages 1450-1467.
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Jessica Amberson. (2022) On being a dog-person: Meaning-making & dog-walking identities. Irish Journal of Sociology 31:1, pages 161-180.
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Nurul Atiqah Amran, Arbaayah Ali Termizi, Rosli Talif & Mohammad Ewan Awang. (2022) RECONSTRUCTING THE GENDERED SPACES USING PSYCHOGEOGRAPHY IN CHAN LING YAP’S SWEET OFFERINGS. Journal of Language and Communication 9:1, pages 60-79.
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James D Sidaway. (2021) Psychogeography: Walking through strategy, nature and narrative. Progress in Human Geography 46:2, pages 549-574.
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Stephanie Springgay & Sarah E. Truman. (2021) Critical Walking Methodologies and Oblique Agitations of Place. Qualitative Inquiry 28:2, pages 171-176.
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Kerrie SchaeferKerrie Schaefer. 2022. Communities, Performance and Practice. Communities, Performance and Practice 125 156 .
David Brown & Sharon Wilson. 2021. Tourism Dynamics. Tourism Dynamics.
Tiina Männistö-Funk. (2019) The gender of walking: female pedestrians in street photographs 1890–1989. Urban History 48:2, pages 227-247.
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Maciej Kowalewski & Robert Bartłomiejski. (2020) Is it research or just walking? Framing walking research methods as “non-scientific”. Geoforum 114, pages 59-65.
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Ken Wilson. (2020) Wood Mountain Walk and the Possibilities of Decolonization through Relationships with People and Land in Solo Walking Performance . Canadian Theatre Review 182, pages 51-56.
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Angela Campbell. 2020. Located Research. Located Research 55 69 .
Yana MeerzonYana Meerzon. 2020. Performance, Subjectivity, Cosmopolitanism. Performance, Subjectivity, Cosmopolitanism 237 274 .
Mazia Yassim. (2019) The wicked problem of social cohesion: moving ahead. Journal of Social Marketing 9:4, pages 507-521.
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Harriet Tarlo & Judith Tucker. (2019) Poetry, Painting and Change on the Edge of England. Sociologia Ruralis 59:4, pages 636-660.
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Kaya Barry & Jondi KeaneKaya Barry & Jondi Keane. 2019. Creative Measures of the Anthropocene. Creative Measures of the Anthropocene 25 51 .
Tim Edensor & Steve Millington. (2018) Learning from Blackpool Promenade: Re-enchanting sterile streets. The Sociological Review 66:5, pages 1017-1035.
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Wayne Medford. (2018) A Year in the Life of a Public Park: Route-Making, Vigilance and Sampling Time Whilst Walking. Humanities 7:1, pages 18.
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Stephanie Springgay & Sarah E. Truman. (2017) A Transmaterial Approach to Walking Methodologies. Body & Society 23:4, pages 27-58.
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Jo Vergunst. (2017) Key figure of mobility: the pedestrian. Social Anthropology 25:1, pages 13-27.
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Peter Merriman. (2014) Mobilities I. Progress in Human Geography 39:1, pages 87-95.
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