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Original Articles

Putting the Dog Back in the Park: Animal and Human Mind-in-Action

Pages 2-24 | Published online: 17 Nov 2009

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

Read on this site (11)

Beatrice Szczepek Reed. (2023) Designing Talk for Humans and Horses: Prosody as a Resource for Parallel Recipient Design. Research on Language and Social Interaction 56:2, pages 89-115.
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Thomas Fletcher & Louise Platt. (2018) (Just) a walk with the dog? Animal geographies and negotiating walking spaces. Social & Cultural Geography 19:2, pages 211-229.
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Lesley Instone & Jill Sweeney. (2014) The trouble with dogs: ‘animaling’ public space in the Australian city. Continuum 28:6, pages 774-786.
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José Parry. (2011) Sentimentality and the Enemies of Animal Protection. Anthrozoös 24:2, pages 117-133.
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Pauliina Rautio. (2011) Writing about Everyday Beauty: Anthropomorphizing and Distancing as Literary Practices. Environmental Communication 5:1, pages 104-123.
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Jennie Middleton. (2010) Sense and the city: exploring the embodied geographies of urban walking. Social & Cultural Geography 11:6, pages 575-596.
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Emma Power. (2008) Furry families: making a human–dog family through home. Social & Cultural Geography 9:5, pages 535-555.
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Articles from other publishers (46)

Marlou Rasenberg, Azeb Amha, Matt Coler, Marjo van Koppen, Emiel van Miltenburg, Lynn de Rijk, Wyke Stommel & Mark Dingemanse. (2023) Reimagining language. Linguistics in the Netherlands 40, pages 309-317.
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Mika Simonen. (2023) Dogs responding to human utterances in embodied ways. Journal of Pragmatics 217, pages 69-84.
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Chloé Mondémé. (2023) Sequence organization in human–animal interaction. An exploration of two canonical sequences. Journal of Pragmatics 214, pages 73-88.
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Eugenie van Heijgen, Clemens Driessen & Esther Turnhout. (2023) The landscape is a trap: Duck decoys as multispecies atmospheres of deception and betrayal. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers.
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Brian L. Due. (2023) A Walk in the Park With Robodog: Navigating Around Pedestrians Using a Spot Robot as a “Guide Dog”. Space and Culture, pages 120633122311592.
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Verena Schröder. (2022) More than words: Comics als narratives Medium für Mehr-als-menschliche Geographien. Geographica Helvetica 77:2, pages 271-287.
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Nick Llewellyn, Jon Hindmarsh & Robin Burrow. (2022) Coalitions of touch: Balancing restraint and haptic soothing in the veterinary clinic. Sociology of Health & Illness 44:4-5, pages 725-744.
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Chloé Mondémé. (2021) Why study turn‐taking sequences in interspecies interactions?. Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 52:1, pages 67-85.
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Hyung-Sook Lee, Jin-Gyeoung Song & Jeong-Yeon Lee. (2022) Influences of Dog Attachment and Dog Walking on Reducing Loneliness during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Korea. Animals 12:4, pages 483.
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Yaara Sadetzki & Orit Hirsch-Matsioulas. (2021) Leashing the City: Dog-Leash-Human Entanglements and the Urban Space. Leashing the City: Dog-Leash-Human Entanglements and the Urban Space.
Mikko Äijälä. (2021) Mobile video ethnography for evoking animals in tourism. Annals of Tourism Research 89, pages 103203.
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Bill Tomlinson, Bonnie Nardi, Daniel Stokols & Ankita Raturi. (2021) Ecosystemas: Representing Ecosystem Impacts in Design. Ecosystemas: Representing Ecosystem Impacts in Design.
Marie Chenet. (2020) Filmer le travail : apports d’une pratique de cinéma documentaire en géographieFilming the work : contribution of the documentary filmmaking to the geography. Images du travail, travail des images:8.
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Matthew Adams. (2019) The kingdom of dogs: Understanding Pavlov’s experiments as human–animal relationships. Theory & Psychology 30:1, pages 121-141.
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Tanner Vea. (2019) The ethical sensations of im‐mediacy: Embodiment and multiple literacies in animal rights activists’ learning with media technologies. British Journal of Educational Technology 50:4, pages 1589-1602.
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Susan Boonman‐Berson, Clemens Driessen & Esther Turnhout. (2018) Managing wild minds: From control by numbers to a multinatural approach in wild boar management in the Veluwe, the Netherlands. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 44:1, pages 2-15.
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Fredrik Aspling, Oskar Juhlin & Heli Väätäjä. (2018) Understanding animals. Understanding animals.
Carri Westgarth, Robert Christley, Garry Marvin & Elizabeth Perkins. (2017) I Walk My Dog Because It Makes Me Happy: A Qualitative Study to Understand Why Dogs Motivate Walking and Improved Health. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 14:8, pages 936.
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Christopher Bear, Katy Wilkinson & Lewis Holloway. (2017) Visualizing Human-Animal-Technology Relations. Society & Animals 25:3, pages 225-256.
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Lindsay Hamilton & Nik TaylorLindsay Hamilton & Nik Taylor. 2017. Ethnography after Humanism. Ethnography after Humanism 51 67 .
Rosemary-Claire Collard. (2016) Electric elephants and the lively/lethal energies of wildlife documentary film. Area 48:4, pages 472-479.
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Chloé Mondémé. (2016) Extension de la question de « l’ordre social » aux interactions hommes / animaux. une approche ethnométhodologique. L'Année sociologique Vol. 66:2, pages 319-350.
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Fredrik Aspling, Oskar Juhlin & Elisa Chiodo. (2015) Smelling, pulling, and looking. Smelling, pulling, and looking.
Paul G. Keil. (2015) Human-Sheepdog Distributed Cognitive Systems: An Analysis of Interspecies Cognitive Scaffolding in a Sheepdog Trial. Journal of Cognition And Culture 15:5, pages 508-529.
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Will Kymlicka & Sue Donaldson. (2015) Étendre la citoyenneté aux animauxAnimals and the frontiers of citizenship. Tracés:#15, pages 139-166.
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Sue Donaldson & Will Kymlicka. (2015) Interspecies Politics: Reply to Hinchcliffe and Ladwig. Journal of Political Philosophy 23:3, pages 321-344.
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Henry Buller. (2014) Animal geographies II. Progress in Human Geography 39:3, pages 374-384.
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Richard Yarwood. (2015) Lost and hound: The more-than-human networks of rural policing. Journal of Rural Studies 39, pages 278-286.
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Paolo Mongillo, Serena Adamelli, Elisa Pitteri & Lieta Marinelli. (2015) Attention of dogs and owners in urban contexts: Public perception and problematic behaviors. Journal of Veterinary Behavior 10:3, pages 210-216.
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Jennie Middleton & Richard Yarwood. (2013) ‘Christians, out here?’ Encountering Street-Pastors in the post-secular spaces of the UK’s night-time economy. Urban Studies 52:3, pages 501-516.
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Kim Kullman. (2014) Children, Urban Care, and Everyday Pavements. Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 46:12, pages 2864-2880.
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Sue Donaldson & Will Kymlicka. (2014) Unruly Beasts: Animal Citizens and the Threat of Tyranny. Canadian Journal of Political Science 47:1, pages 23-45.
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Louise Holt. (2013) Exploring the Emergence of the Subject in Power: Infant Geographies. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 31:4, pages 645-663.
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Jamie Lorimer & Krithika Srinivasan. 2013. The Wiley‐Blackwell Companion to Cultural Geography. The Wiley‐Blackwell Companion to Cultural Geography 332 342 .
Julie Urbanik & Mary Morgan. (2013) A tale of tails: The place of dog parks in the urban imaginary. Geoforum 44, pages 292-302.
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Véronique Servais. (2012) La visite au zoo et l’apprentissage de la distinction humaineVisiting the zoo and learning the human-animal boundaryVisitando al zoo y aprendiendo la frontera hombre-animal. Revue d'anthropologie des connaissances 6:3.
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Elaine Campbell. (2012) Landscapes of Performance: Stalking as Choreography. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 30:3, pages 400-417.
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Katrina Brown & Rachel Dilley. (2011) Ways of knowing for ‘response‐ability’ in more‐than‐human encounters: the role of anticipatory knowledges in outdoor access with dogs. Area 44:1, pages 37-45.
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Paul Simpson. (2011) ‘So, as you can see . . .’: some reflections on the utility of video methodologies in the study of embodied practices. Area 43:3, pages 343-352.
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Jamie Lorimer. 2011. The Wiley‐Blackwell Companion to Human Geography. The Wiley‐Blackwell Companion to Human Geography 197 208 .
Elizabeth Stokoe. (2009) “For the benefit of the tape”: Formulating embodied conduct in designedly uni-modal recorded police–suspect interrogations. Journal of Pragmatics 41:10, pages 1887-1904.
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Kate Swanson. (2008) Witches, children and Kiva-the-research-dog: striking problems encountered in the field. Area 40:1, pages 55-64.
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Adrian Franklin, Michael Emmison, Donna Haraway & Max Travers. (2007) Investigating the therapeutic benefits of companion animals: Problems and challenges. Qualitative Sociology Review 3:1, pages 42-58.
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Pru Hobson-West. (2007) Beasts and boundaries: An introduction to animals in sociology, science and society. Qualitative Sociology Review 3:1, pages 23-41.
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Gail DaviesClaire Dwyer. (2016) Qualitative methods: are you enchanted or are you alienated?. Progress in Human Geography 31:2, pages 257-266.
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Eric Laurier & Chris Philo. (2006) Cold shoulders and napkins handed: gestures of responsibility. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 31:2, pages 193-207.
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