1,569
Views
0
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Beyond the Flâneur: Urban Walking as Peripatetic Phenomenological Pedagogy

Pages 78-101 | Received 12 Aug 2020, Accepted 21 Sep 2022, Published online: 16 Feb 2023

REFERENCES

  • Adams, J. E. 2018. Circulation and urbanization. London: Sage.
  • Addie, J.-P. 2016. Theorising suburban infrastructure: A framework for critical and comparative analysis. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 41 (3):273–85. doi:10.1111/tran.12121.
  • Addie, J.-P., and J. Fraser. 2019. After gentrification: Social mix, settler colonialism, and cruel optimism in the transformation of neighbourhood space. Antipode 51 (5):1369–94. doi:10.1111/anti.12572.
  • Adey, P., K. Hannam, M. Sheller, and D. Tyfield. 2021. Pandemic (im)mobilities. Mobilities 16 (1):1–19. doi:10.1080/17450101.2021.1872871.
  • Ahmed, S. 2006. Orientations: Toward queer phenomenology. GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 12 (4):543–74. doi:10.1215/10642684-2006-002.
  • Allen, Ê. C. 2004. Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenology and the body-in-space encounters of visually impaired children. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 22 (5):719–35. doi:10.1068/d303t.
  • Alsdorf, B. 2022. Gawkers: Art and audience in late nineteenth-century France. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  • Amata, J. 2004. On foot. A history of walking. New York: NYU Press.
  • Anderson, J. 2004. Talking whilst walking: A geographical archaeology of knowledge. Area 36 (3):254–61. doi:10.1111/j.0004-0894.2004.00222.x.
  • Anderson, K. 2014. Mind over matter? On decentering the human in human geography. Cultural Geographies 21 (1):3–18. doi:10.1177/1474474013513409.
  • Aoki, J., and A. Yoshimizu. 2015. Walking histories, un/making places: Walking tours as ethnography of place. Space and Culture 18 (3):273–84. doi:10.1177/1206331215579719.
  • Appel, H., N. Anand, and A. Gupta, eds. 2018. The promise of infrastructure. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
  • Ash, J. 2020. Post-phenomenology and space: A geography of comprehension, form and power. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 45 (1):181–93. doi:10.1111/tran.12331.
  • Ash, J., and P. Simpson. 2016. Geography and post-phenomenology. Progress in Human Geography 40 (1):48–66. doi:10.1177/0309132514544806.
  • Bairner, A. 2011. Urban walking and the pedagogies of the street. Sports, Education and Society 16 (3):371–84. doi:10.1080/13573322.2011.565968.
  • Barthes, R. 1979. Lecture: In inauguration of the chair of literary semiology, Collège de France, January 7, 1977, trans. R Howard. Oxford Literary Review 4 (1):31–44. doi:10.3366/olr.1979.005.
  • Barthes, R. 2005. The neutral: Lecture course at the Collège de France (1977–1978), trans. R.E. Krauss and D. Hollier, ed. T. Clerc, New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Bassett, K. 2004. Walking as an aesthetic practice and a critical tool: Some psychogeographic experiments. Journal of Geography in Higher Education 28 (3):397–410. doi:10.1080/0309826042000286965.
  • Bauman, Z. 1987. Postmodernity and its discontents. London: Sage.
  • Beaumont, M. 2015. Nightwalking: A nocturnal history of London. London: Verso.
  • Benjamin, W. 1983. “Der Flâneur.” In Das Passagen-Werk, 2 Vols, 524–569. Frankfurt: Suhrkamp. {English translation: Benjamin, W. 1973, “The Flaneur.” In Charles Baudelaire: A lyric poet in the era of high capitalism, 35–66. London: NLB.
  • Billinge, M. 1983. The Mandarin dialect: An essay on style in contemporary geographical writing. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 8 (4):400–20. doi:10.2307/621959.
  • Bissell, D. 2010. Passenger mobilities: Affective atmospheres and the sociality of public transport. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 28 (2):270–89. doi:10.1068/d3909.
  • Bonnett, A. 1989. Situationism, geography and poststructuralism. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 7 (2):131–46. doi:10.1068/d070131.
  • Brown, E., and T. Shortell, eds. 2016. Walking in cities: Quotidian mobility as urban theory, method, and practice. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
  • Buck-Morss, S. 1986. The Flaneur, the Sandwichman and the Whore: The Politics of Loitering. New German Critique 39 (39):99–140. doi:10.2307/488122.
  • Burton, R. 2009. The flâneur and his city. Patterns of daily life in Paris, 1815–1851. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
  • Careri, F. 2017. Walkscapes: Walking as an aesthetic practice. Barcelona. Gustavo Gili.
  • Carpiano, R. 2009. Come take a walk with me: The “Go-Along” interview as a novel method for studying the implications of place for health and well-being. Health & Place 15 (1):263–72.
  • Castree, N., and C. Nash. 2006. Editorial: Posthuman geographies. Social & Cultural Geography 7 (4):501–4. doi:10.1080/14649360600825620.
  • Cole, T. 2011. Open city. New York: Random House.
  • Corbusier, L. 1925. Urbanisme. Paris, Éditions G. Cress & Cie, Collection ‘L’Esprit Nouveau.
  • Cosgrove, D. 2008. Geography and vision: Seeing, imagining and representing the world. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Coverley, M. 2010. Psychogeography. Harpenden: Pocket Essentials.
  • Coverley, M. 2012. The art of wandering. The writer as walker. Harpenden: Oldcastle.
  • Cresswell, T. 2010. Towards a politics of mobility. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 28 (1):17–31. doi:10.1068/d11407.
  • de Certeau, M. 1984. The practice of everyday life. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Dewsbury, J. D. 2015. Non‐representational landscapes and the performative affective forces of habit: From “Live” to “Blank.” Cultural Geographies 22 (1):29–47. doi:10.1177/1474474014561575.
  • Dewsbury, J. D., and P. Cloke. 2009. Spiritual landscapes: Existence, performance and immanence. Social & Cultural Geography 10 (6):695–711. doi:10.1080/14649360903068118.
  • Dixon, D., H. Hawkins, and E. Straughan. 2012. Of human birds and living rocks. Remaking aesthetics for post-human worlds. Dialogues in Human Geography 2 (3):249–70. doi:10.1177/2043820612468692.
  • Edensor, T. 2000. Walking in the British countryside. Body & Society 6 (3–4):81–106. doi:10.1177/1357034X00006003005.
  • Edensor, T. 2010. Walking in rhythms: Place, regulation, style and flow of experience. Visual Studies 25 (1):69–79. doi:10.1080/14725861003606902.
  • Ehrkamp, P. 2013. “I’ve had it with them!” Younger migrant women’s spatial practices of conformity and resistance. Gender, Place & Culture 20 (1):19–36. doi:10.1080/0966369X.2011.649356.
  • Featherstone, M. 1998. The Flaneur, the city and virtual public life. Urban Studies 35 (5-6):909–25. doi:10.1080/0042098984619.
  • Fisch, M. 2013. Tokyo’s commuter train suicides and the society of emergence. Cultural Anthropology 28 (2):320–43. doi:10.1111/cuan.12006.
  • Fleming, A. 2019. “It’s a superpower”: How walking makes us healthier, happier and brainier. The Guardian, July 28. https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2019/jul/28/its-a-superpower-how-walking-makes-us-healthier-happier-and-brainier
  • Furlong, K. 2020. Geographies of infrastructure I: Economics. Progress in Human Geography 44 (3):572–82. doi:10.1177/0309132519850913.
  • Gatta, F., and M. S. A. Palumbo. 2016. Walk thorough urban transformation: Fieldwork in the Northeast of Paris. In Walking the European city: Quotidian mobility and urban ethnography, ed. T. Shortell and E. Brown, 245–62. New York: Routledge.
  • Gibas, P. 2019. Between roots and rhizomes: Towards a post‐phenomenology of home. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 44 (3):602–15. doi:10.1111/tran.12304.
  • Gluck, M. 2003. The flâneur and the aesthetic appropriation of urban culture in mid-19th century Paris. Theory, Culture & Society 20 (5):53–80. doi:10.1177/02632764030205003.
  • Goertz, K. 2018. Walking as pedagogy. In The Routledge international handbook of walking, ed. C. M. Hall, N. Shoval, and Y. Ram. New York: Routledge.
  • Goodley, D. 2014. Dis/ability studies: Theorising disablism and ableism. New York: Routledge.
  • Graham, S., and C. McFarlane, eds. 2015. Infrastructural lives: urban infrastructure in context, New York, Routledge
  • Gros, F. 2014. A philosophy of walking, trans. J. Howe. London: Verso.
  • Groth, S., J. Hebsaker, and L. Pohl. 2017. Kunst des Gehens. Taktiken im Ort des Automobils. Sub\urban. zeitschrift für kritische stadtforschung 5 (1/2):257–66. doi:10.36900/suburban.v5i1/2.275.
  • Hannah, M. 2015. Aufmerksamkeit und geographische Praxis. Geographische Zeitschrift 103 (3):131–50. doi:10.25162/gz-2015-0017.
  • Hannah, M. 2018. Direction and socio-spatial theory. A political economy of orientated practice, New York: Routledge.
  • Hansen, N., and C. Philo. 2007. The normality of doing things differently: Bodies, spaces and disability geography. Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie 98 (4):493–506. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9663.2007.00417.x.
  • Harvey, D. 1996. Justice, nature and the geography of difference. Oxford: Blackwell.
  • Hazan, E. 2010. The invention of Paris: A history in footsteps. London: Verso.
  • Hazan, E. 2017. Une traverse de Paris. Paris: Seuil.
  • Hynes, M. 2022. Walk a mile in my shoes! An autoethnographic perspectives of urban walkability in Galway. Journal of Contemporary Ethnography 51 (5):619–44.
  • Ingold, T. 2004. Culture on the ground: The world perceived through the feet. Journal of Material Culture 9 (3):315–40. doi:10.1177/1359183504046896.
  • Israel, A. L. 2012. Putting geography education into place: What geography educators can learn from place-based education, and vice versa. Journal of Geography 111 (2):76–81. doi:10.1080/00221341.2011.583264.
  • Jarvis, C., N. Tate, J. Dickie, and G. Brown. 2016. Mobile learning in a human geography field course. Journal of Geography 115 (2):61–71. doi:10.1080/00221341.2015.1026373.
  • Jenks, C. 1995. Watching your step. The history and practice of the flaneur. In Visual Culture, ed. C Jenks, 142–60. New York: Routledge.
  • Jenks, C., and T. Neves. 2000. A walk on the wild side: urban ethnography meets the flaneur. Cultural Values 4 (1):1, 1–17. doi:10.1080/14797580009367183.
  • Joseph-Lester, J, S. King, A. Blier-Carruthers, and R. Bottazzi, eds. 2016. Walking cities: London. New York: Routledge.
  • Kagge, E. 2019. Walking. One step at a time. New York: Viking.
  • Kingwell, M. 2013. Talking the walk. A stroll through our cities. Harper’s Magazine 327( 1958):85–90.
  • Kinkaid, E. 2020. Is post-phenomenology a critical geography? Subjectivity and difference in post-phenomenological geographies. Progress in Human Geography 1:19.
  • Kirsch, S. 2013. Cultural geography I: Materialist turns. Progress in Human Geography 37 (3):433–41. doi:10.1177/0309132512459479.
  • Kusenbach, M. 2003. Street phenomenology: The go-along as ethnographic research tool. Ethnography 4 (3):455–85. doi:10.1177/146613810343007.
  • Larkin, B. 2013. The politics and poetics of infrastructure. Annual Review of Anthropology 42 (1):327–43. doi:10.1146/annurev-anthro-092412-155522.
  • Lea, J. J. 2009. Post-phenomenology/post-phenomenological geographies. In International encyclopedia of human geography, ed. R. Kitchin and N. Thrift, 373–8. Oxford: Elsevier.
  • Leible, H. 2013. Walking as knowing: An interpretative phenomenological analysis of leisure in the lived experience of walking. PhD thesis, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. https://www.ideals.illinois.edu/bitstream/handle/2142/44349/Heidi_Reible.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
  • Leyden, K. M. 2003. Social capital and the built environment: The importance of walkable neighborhoods. American Journal of Public Health 93 (9):1546–51.
  • Linehan, H. 2020. Aimlessly walking within 2km of home, am I now a flâneur? Irish Times, April 28. https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/aimlessly-walking-within-2km-of-home-am-i-now-a-flâneur-1.4236129
  • Livingston, 1990. Geography, tradition and the scientific revolution: An interpretative essay. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 15 (3):359–73.
  • Lorimer, H. 2009. Posthumanism/posthumanistic geographies. International Encyclopedia of Human Geography 8 :344–54.
  • Lorimer, H. 2010. Walking: New forms and spaces for studies of pedestrianism. In Geographies of mobilities: Practices, spaces, subjects, ed. T. Cresswell and P. Merriman, 19–33. Aldershot: Ashgate.
  • Lorimer, H. 2014. Homeland. Cultural Geographies 21 (4):583–604.
  • Lorimer, H. 2019. Dear departed: writing the lifeworlds of place. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 44 (2):331–45. doi:10.1111/tran.12278.
  • Lorimer, H., and J. Wylie. 2010. LOOP (a geography). Performance Research 15 (4):6–13. doi:10.1080/13528165.2010.539872.
  • Lugones, M. 2003. Pilgrimages/peregrinajes: Theorizing coalition against multiple oppressions. Lanham, MD: Rowan & Littlefield.
  • Lund, K. 2013. Landscapes and narratives: Compositions and the walking body. Landscape Research 37 (2):225–237.
  • Lynch, K. 1960. The image of the city. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  • Macauley, D. 2000. Walking the city: An essay on peripatetic practices and politics. Capitalism Nature Socialism 11 (4):3–43. doi:10.1080/10455750009358938.
  • Macdonald, F. 2014. The ruins of Erskine Beveridge. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 39 (4):477–89. doi:10.1111/tran.12042.
  • Macfarlane, R. 2013. The old ways. London: Penguin.
  • Macpherson, H. 2010. Non-representational approaches to body-landscape relations. Geography Compass 4 (1):1–13. doi:10.1111/j.1749-8198.2009.00276.x.
  • Martínez Euklidiadas, M. 2020. Paris wants to become a “15-minute city.” https://www.smartcitylab.com/blog/governance-finance/paris-15-minute-city/
  • Marston, S., J. P. Jones, III, and K. Woodward. 2005. Human geography without scale. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 30 (4):416–32. doi:10.1111/j.1475-5661.2005.00180.x.
  • Matless, D. 1994. Doing the English Village, 1945–1990: An essay in imaginative geography. In Writing the rural: Five cultural geographies, ed. P. Cloke, M. Doel, D. Matless, M. Phillips, and N. Thrift, 7–88. Liverpool: Paul Chapman.
  • McCormack, D. P. 2017. The circumstances of post‐phenomenological life worlds. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 42 (1):2–13. doi:10.1111/tran.12146.
  • McGregor, J. 2004. Space, power and the classroom. Forum 46 (1):13–8. doi:10.2304/forum.2004.46.1.2.
  • Merchant, N. 2013. Got a meeting? Take a walk. TED talk, February. https://www.ted.com/talks/nilofer_merchant_got_a_meeting_take_a_walk?language=en
  • Middleton, J. 2009. “Stepping in time”: Walking, time and space in the city. Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 41 (8):1943–61. doi:10.1068/a41170.
  • Middleton, J. 2010. Sense and the city: Exploring the embodied geographies of urban walking. Social & Cultural Geography 11 (6):575–96. doi:10.1080/14649365.2010.497913.
  • Middleton, J. 2011a. Walking in the City: The geographies of everyday pedestrian practices. Geography Compass 5 (2):90–105. doi:10.1111/j.1749-8198.2010.00409.x.
  • Middleton, J. 2011b. “I’m on autopilot, I just follow the route”: Exploring the habits, routines, and decision-making practices of everyday urban mobilities. Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 43 (12):2857–77. doi:10.1068/a43600.
  • Millot, C. 2018. Life with Lacan, trans. A Brown. London: Polity.
  • Monchaux, N. d. 2020. The spaces that make cities Fairer and more resilient. New York Times, May 12. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/12/opinion/sunday/cities-public-space-covid.html
  • Moreno, C., Z. Allam, D. Chabaud, C. Gall, and F. Pratlong. 2021. Introducing the “15-minute city”: Sustainability, resilience and place identity in future post-pandemic cities. Smart Cities 4 (1):93–111. doi:10.3390/smartcities4010006.
  • Morris, B. 2004. What we talk about when we talk about “walking in the city.” Cultural Studies 18 (5):675–97. doi:10.1080/0950238042000260351.
  • Morris, B. 2020. Walking networks. The development of an artistic medium. New York: Rowman & Littlefield.
  • Mortimer, P. 1999. Broke through Britain: One man’s penniless Odyssey. Edinburgh: Mainstream.
  • Mott, C., and S. Roberts. 2014. Not everyone has (the) balls: Urban exploration and the persistence of masculinist geography. Antipode 46 (1):229–45. doi:10.1111/anti.12033.
  • Murphy, J. 2011. Walking a public geography through Ireland and Scotland. The Geographical Journal 177 (4):367–79. doi:10.1111/j.1475-4959.2011.00406.x.
  • Nicholson, J. 2009. The lost art of walking: The history, science, philosophy, literature, theory and practice of pedestrianism. Chelmsford: Harbour Books.
  • Nuvolati, G. 2016. The flâneur: A way of walking, exploring and interpreting the city. In Walking in the European City: Quotidian mobility and urban ethnography, ed. T. Shortell and E. Brown, 21–40. New York: Routledge.
  • O’Mara, S. 2019. In praise of walking. The new science of how we walk and why it’s good for us. London, Bodley Head
  • O’Neill, M., and B. Roberts, eds. 2020. Walking methods. Research on the move. New York: Routledge.
  • Oliver, M. J. 1993. What’s so wonderful about walking? In Inaugural professorial lecture. London: University of Greenwich London. http://disability-studies.leeds.ac.uk/files/library/Oliver-PROFLEC.pdf.
  • Olwig, K. R. 2008. Performing on the landscape versus doing landscape: Perambulatory practice, sight and the sense of belonging. In Ways of walking. Ethnography and practice on foot, ed. T. Ingold and J. Vergunst, 81–91. Aldershot: Ashgate.
  • Paeslack, M. 2010. Subjective topographies: Berlin in post-wall photography. In Spatial turns: Space, place, and mobility in German literary and visual culture, ed. N. Otto, 397–420. (Amsterdamer Beiträge zur neueren Germanistik 75). Amsterdam: Rodopi.
  • Panelli, R. 2010. More-than-human social geographies: Posthuman and other possibilities. Progress in Human Geography 34 (1):79–87. doi:10.1177/0309132509105007.
  • Parent, L. 2016. The wheeling interview: Mobile methods and disability. Mobilities 11 (4):521–32. doi:10.1080/17450101.2016.1211820.
  • Perec, G. 2003 [1978]. Life a user’s manual. Trans. D. Bellos, Rev ed. London: Vintage.
  • Phillips, P. 2004. Doing art and doing cultural geography: The fieldwork/field walking project 1. Australian Geographer 35 (2):151–9. doi:10.1080/0004918042000249458.
  • Philo, C. 2017. Less-than-human geographies. Political Geography 60:256–8. doi:10.1016/j.polgeo.2016.11.014.
  • Pickles, J. 1985. Phenomenology, science and geography: Spatiality and the human sciences. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Pierce, J., and M. Lawhon. 2015. Walking as method: Towards methodological forthrightness and comparability in urban geographical research. The Professional Geographer 67 (4):655–62. doi:10.1080/00330124.2015.1059401.
  • Pile, S. 2010. Emotions and affects in recent human geography. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 35 (1):5–20. doi:10.1111/j.1475-5661.2009.00368.x.
  • Pinder, D. 1996. Subverting cartography: The situationists and maps of the city. Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 28 (3):405–27. doi:10.1068/a280405.
  • Pink, S. 2008. An urban tour. The sensory sociality of ethnographic place-making. Ethnography 9 (2):175–96. doi:10.1177/1466138108089467.
  • Piro, J. M. 2008. Foucault and the architecture of surveillance: Creating regimes of power in schools, shrines, and society. Educational Studies 44 (1):30–46. doi:10.1080/00131940802225036.
  • Pozoukidou, G., and Z. Chatziyiannaki. 2021. 15-Minute city: Decomposing the new urban planning eutopia. Sustainability 13 (2):928–53. doi:10.3390/su13020928.
  • Rao, V. 2007. Proximate distance: The phenomenology of density in Mumbai. Built Environment 33 (2):227–48. doi:10.2148/benv.33.2.227.
  • Read, B., and C. Lampen. 2020. What we know about the killing of Ahmaud Arbery. The Cut, May 25. https://www.thecut.com/2020/05/ahmaud-arbery-shooting-georgia-explainer.html
  • Reilly, K., A. Clavin, and J. Morrissey. 2016. Participative critical enquiry in graduate field-based learning. Journal of Geography in Higher Education 40 (1):104–16. doi:10.1080/03098265.2015.1086980.
  • Richardson, I., and R. Wilken. 2009. Haptic vision, footwork, place-making: A peripatetic phenomenology of the mobile phone pedestrian. Second Nature 2:22–41.
  • Roberts, T. 2018. Resituating post-phenomenological geographies: Deleuze, relations and the limits of objects. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 44 (3):542–54. doi:10.1111/tran.12280.
  • Rose, G. 2003. On the need to ask, exactly, is geography “visual”? Antipode 35 (2):212–21. doi:10.1111/1467-8330.00317.
  • Salamon, G. 2015. Passing period. Gender, aggression, and the phenomenology of walking. In Phenomenology and performance, ed. M. Bleeker, J. F. Sherman, and E. Nedelkopoulou. New York: Routledge.
  • Sawyer, R. K. 2005. Social emergence: Societies as complex systems. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Seamon, D. 2018a. Life takes place. Phenomenology, lifewords and place making. New York, NY: Routledge.
  • Seamon, D. 2018b. Merleau-Ponty, lived body, and place: Toward a phenomenology of human situatedness. In Situatedness and place. Contributions to phenomenology (in cooperation with the center for advanced research in phenomenology). vol 95, ed. T. Hünefeldt and A. Schlitte, 41–66. Cham: Springer.
  • Self, W. 2012. Walking is political. The Guardian, March 30. www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/mar/30/will-self-walking-cities-foot
  • Sidaway, J. 2000. Postcolonial geographies: An exploratory essay. Progress in Human Geography 24 (4):591–612. doi:10.1191/030913200100189120.
  • Simonsen, K. 2013. In quest of a new humanism. Embodiment, experience and phenomenology as critical geography. Progress in Human Geography 37 (1):10–26. doi:10.1177/0309132512467573.
  • Sinclair, I. 2003. London orbital. London: Penguin.
  • Solnit, R. 2000. Wanderlust. A history of walking. New York: Penguin.
  • Sorkin, M. 2009. Twenty minutes in Manhattan. London: Reaktion.
  • Southworth, M. 2005. Designing the walkable city. Journal of Urban Planning and Development 131 (4):246–57. doi:10.1061/(ASCE)0733-9488(2005)131:4(246).
  • Speck, J. 2013. Walkable city: How downtown can save America. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
  • Spinney, J. 2015. Close encounters? Mobile methods, (post)phenomenology and affect. Cultural Geographies 22 (2):231–46. doi:10.1177/1474474014558988.
  • Springgay, S., and S. E. Truman. 2018. Walking methodologies in a more-than-human world: WalkingLab. New York: Routledge.
  • Strohmayer, U. 1997. Technology, modernity and the re-structuring of everyday geographies. Geografiska Annaler (Series B) 79 (3):155–69. doi:10.1111/j.0435-3684.1997.00015.x.
  • Strohmayer, U. 2007. Engineering vision: the Pont-Neuf in Paris and modernity. In The city and the senses: Urban culture since 1500, ed. A. Cowan and J. Steward, 75–92. Basingstoke: Ashgate.
  • Strohmayer, U., and J. Corre. 2012. Performing marginal space: Film, topology and the Petite Ceinture in Paris. Liminalities 8 (4):1–16.
  • Sultana, F. 2009. Community and participation in water resources management: Gendering and naturing development debates from Bangladesh. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 34 (3):346–63. doi:10.1111/j.1475-5661.2009.00345.x.
  • Teeuwen, R. 2020. “The dream of a minimal sociality”: Roland Barthes’ skeptic intensity. Theory, Culture & Society 37 (4):119–34. doi:10.1177/0263276416659695.
  • Tester, K., ed. 1994. The flâneur. London: Routledge.
  • Thibaud, J.-P. 2013. Commented city walks. Wi: Journal of Mobile Culture 7(1): 1–32.
  • Thompson, V. E. 2011. Knowing Paris: Changing approaches to describing the enlightenment city. Journal of Urban History 37 (1):28–42. doi:10.1177/0096144210384245.
  • Tolia-Kelly, D. 2013. The geographies of cultural geography III: Material geographies, vibrant matters and risking surface geographies. Progress in Human Geography 37 (1):153–60. doi:10.1177/0309132512439154.
  • Truniger, F. 2013. The pedestrian’s gaze. In Filmic mapping. Film and the visual culture of landscape architecture, 123–37. Berlin: Jovis.
  • van Ness, A., and T. Nguyen. 2009. Gender differences in the urban environment. The flâneur and flâneuse of the 21st century. In Proceedings of the 7th International Space Syntax Symposium, ed. D. Koch, L. Marcus, and J. Steen, 122: 1–7. Stockholm: KTH.
  • Vergunst, J. 2010. Rhythms of walking: History and presence in a city street. Space and Culture 13 (4):376–88. doi:10.1177/1206331210374145.
  • Waitt, G., N. Gill, and L. Head. 2009. Walking practice and suburban nature-talk. Social & Cultural Geography 10 (1):41–60. doi:10.1080/14649360802553186.
  • Wakefield, S. 2018. Infrastructures of liberal life: From modernity and progress to resilience and ruins. Geography Compass 12 (7):e12377. doi:10.1111/gec3.12377.
  • Whatmore, S. 2006. Materialist returns: Practising cultural geography in and for a more-than-human world. Cultural Geographies 13 (4):600–9. doi:10.1191/1474474006cgj377oa.
  • Wills, D. 2005. Full dorsal: Derrida’s politics of friendship. Postmodern Culture 15 (3). doi:10.1353/pmc.2005.0032.
  • Wills, D. 2008. Dorsality: Thinking back through technology and politics. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Wilson, E. 1992. The invisible flaneur. New Left Review 191:90–110.
  • Wolff, J. 1985. The invisible flâneuse. Theory, Culture and Society 2 (3):37–46. doi:10.1177/0263276485002003005.
  • Wright, S. 2015. More-then-human, emergent belongings: A weak theory approach. Progress in Human Geography 39 (4):391–411. doi:10.1177/0309132514537132.
  • Wunderlich, F. M. 2008. Walking and rhythmicity: Sensing urban space. Journal of Urban Design 13 (1):125–139.
  • Wylie, J. 2005. A single day’s walking: Narrating self and landscape on the South West Coast Path. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 30 (2):234–47. doi:10.1111/j.1475-5661.2005.00163.x.
  • Wylie, J. 2006. Depth and folds: On landscape and the gazing subject. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 24 (4):519–35. doi:10.1068/d380t.
  • Zischler, H. 2013. Berlin ist zu groß für Berlin. Berlin: Galiani.