551
Views
3
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Commentary

Refreshing methods: reflections and provocations

, & ORCID Icon
Pages 1328-1337 | Received 11 Nov 2019, Accepted 12 Nov 2019, Published online: 24 Nov 2019

References

  • Basnet, S., Johnston, L., & Longhurst, R. (2018 June 1). Embodying ‘accidental ethnography’: Staying overnight with former Bhutanese refugees in Aotearoa New Zealand. Social & Cultural Geography, 1–15. published online. doi:10.1080/14649365.2018.1480056
  • Crouch, D. (2001). Spatialities and the feeling of doing. Social & Cultural Geography, 2, 61–75.
  • Dixon, D. P., & Whitehead, M. (2008). Technological trajectories: Old and new dialogues in geography and technology studies. Social & Cultural Geography, 9, 601–611.
  • Duffy, M., & Waitt, G. (2013). Home sounds: Experiential practices and performativities of hearing and listening. Social & Cultural Geography, 14, 466–481.
  • Edensor, T. (2010). Geographies of rhythm: Nature, place, mobilities and bodies. Farnham, Surrey, England: Ashgate.
  • Fincher, R. (2011). Cosmopolitan or ethnically identified selves? Institutional expectations and the negotiated identities of international students. Social & Cultural Geography, 12, 905–927.
  • Hawkins, H. (2010). Turn your trash into … rubbish, art and politics. Richard Wentworth’s geographical imagination. Social & Cultural Geography, 11, 805–827.
  • Hui, A. (2013). Moving with practices: The discontinuous, rhythmic and material mobilities of leisure. Social & Cultural Geography, 14, 888–908.
  • Kärrholm, M. (2009). To the rhythm of shopping—On synchronisation in urban landscapes of consumption. Social & Cultural Geography, 10, 421–440.
  • Katz, C. (2013). Playing with fieldwork. Social & Cultural Geography, 14, 762–772.
  • Kobayashi, A., Valerie Preston, V., & Murnaghan, A. (2011). Place, affect, and transnationalism through the voices of Hong Kong immigrants to Canada. Social & Cultural Geography, 12, 871–888.
  • Kwan, M. (2008). From oral histories to visual narratives: Re-presenting the post-September 11 experiences of the Muslim women in the USA. Social & Cultural Geography, 9, 653–669.
  • Listerborn, L. (2015). Geographies of the veil: Violent encounters in urban public spaces in Malmö, Sweden. Social & Cultural Geography, 16, 95–115.
  • Lloyd, K., Suchet-Pearson, S., Wright, S., & Burarrwanga, L. (2010). Stories of crossings and connections from Bawaka, North East Arnhem Land, Australia. Social & Cultural Geography, 11, 701–717.
  • Luo, W., Hartmann, J., Liu, J., & Huang, P. (2007). Geographic patterns of Zhuang (Tai) kinship terms in Guangxi and border areas: A GIS analysis of language and culture change. Social & Cultural Geography, 8, 575–596.
  • Maddrell, A. (2016). Mapping grief. A conceptual framework for understanding the spatial dimensions of bereavement, mourning and remembrance. Social & Cultural Geography, 17, 166–188.
  • Madge, C. (2016). Living through, living with and living on from breast cancer in the UK: Creative cathartic methodologies, cancerous spaces and a politics of compassion. Social & Cultural Geography, 17, 207–232.
  • Mahtani, M. (2014). Toxic geographies: Absences in critical race thought and practice in social and cultural geography. Social & Cultural Geography, 15, 359–367.
  • Maillet., P., Mountz, A., & Williams, K. (2017). Researching migration and enforcement in obscured places: Practical, ethical and methodological challenges to fieldwork. Social & Cultural Geography, 18, 927–950.
  • McNally, D. (2019). ‘I am Tower of Hamlets’: Enchanted encounters and the limit to art’s connectivity. Social & Cultural Geography, 20, 198–221.
  • Merriman, P., Revill, G., Cresswell, T., Lorimer, H., Matless, D., Rose, G., & Wylie, J. (2008). Landscape, mobility, practice. Social & Cultural Geography, 9, 191–212.
  • Meth, P., & McClymont, K. (2009). Researching men: The politics and possibilities of a qualitative mixed-methods approach. Social & Cultural Geography, 10, 909–925.
  • Morton, F. (2005). Performing ethnography: Irish traditional music sessions and new methodological spaces. Social & Cultural Geography, 6, 661–676.
  • Nagel, C. R., & Staeheli, L. (2008). Integration and the negotiation of ‘here’ and ‘there’: The case of British Arab activists. Social & Cultural Geography, 9, 415–430.
  • Nakamura, N. (2014). What is a community’s desire? A critical look at participatory research projects with Indigenous communities. Social & Cultural Geography, 16, 165–182.
  • Nayak, A. (2011). Geography, race and emotions: Social and cultural intersections. Social & Cultural Geography, 12, 548–562.
  • Paterson, M., & Glass, M. R. (2018 February 8). Seeing, feeling, and showing ‘bodies-in-place’: Exploring reflexivity and the multisensory body through videography. Social & Cultural Geography, 1–24. published online. doi:10.1080/14649365.2018.1433866
  • Peterle, G. (2018). Carto-fiction: Narrativising maps through creative writing. Social & Cultural Geography, 20, 1070–1093.
  • Robertson, S. (2017). Thinking of the land in that way’: Indigenous sovereignty and the spatial politics of attentiveness at Skwelkwek’welt. Social & Cultural Geography, 18, 178–200.
  • Sarmento, J. (2017). Tourists’ walking rhythms: ‘Doing’ the Tunis Medina, Tunisia. Social & Cultural Geography, 18, 295–314.
  • Theriault, N., Leduc, T., Mitchell, A., Rubis, J., & Gaehowako, N. J. (2019 May 23). Living protocols: Remaking worlds in the face of extinction. Social & Cultural Geography, 1–16. published online. doi:10.1080/14649365.2019.1619821
  • Tolia-Kelly, D. P. (2016). Anthropocenic culturecide: An epitaph. Social & Cultural Geography, 17, 786–792.
  • Waitt, G., & Phillips, C. (2016). Food waste and domestic refrigeration: A visceral and material approach. Social & Cultural Geography, 17, 359–379.
  • Watson, A., & Huntington, O. H. (2008). They’re here—I can feel them: The epistemic spaces of Indigenous and Western knowledges. Social & Cultural Geography, 9, 257–281.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.