• WALKING AS RESEARCH PRACTICE Edited by Soapbox Journal
  • WALKING AS RESEARCH PRACTICE Edited by Soapbox Journal
  • WALKING AS RESEARCH PRACTICE Edited by Soapbox Journal
  • WALKING AS RESEARCH PRACTICE Edited by Soapbox Journal
  • WALKING AS RESEARCH PRACTICE Edited by Soapbox Journal
  • WALKING AS RESEARCH PRACTICE Edited by Soapbox Journal

WALKING AS RESEARCH PRACTICE Edited by Soapbox Journal

120 x 190mm, 252 pages, Risograph printing, Glue bound, Softcover, 3rd edition of 1000, 2024

What might be considered the research output of a walking practice? An important caveat to this would be to ask where and when the research occurs in relation to the walk, the walking, and the walkers. Does the walk activate our senses, or do our senses demand that we walk? Since walking involves encounters with various objects and subjects, how might it help us emphasise our connection to the more-than-human world? In addition, walking reveals different entry points to a city. Could walking provide a path toward more socially just urban spaces and commons? With an introduction by design critic and educator Alice Twemlow and urbanist and researcher Tânia A. Cardoso.

Contributors: Lynn Gommes Jana Sofie Liebe Alice Twemlow Tânia A. Cardoso Sally Stenton Kamila Wolszczak Maria Persu Darren O’Brien Roxana Perez Mendez Mario Marzan Neila Zannier Natalie Bamford Simon King Mariken Overdijk Nienke Scholts

Published by

Roma

Regular price £32.95