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Walking, Landscape and Environment

TaschenbuchKartoniert, Paperback
248 Seiten
Englisch
Taylor & Franciserschienen am29.08.2022
Walking, Landscape and Environment explores walking as a method of research and practice in the humanities and creative arts, emerging from a recent surge of growth in urban and rural walking.mehr
Verfügbare Formate
TaschenbuchKartoniert, Paperback
EUR56,00
E-BookEPUB0 - No protectionE-Book
EUR53,99
E-BookPDF0 - No protectionE-Book
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Produkt

KlappentextWalking, Landscape and Environment explores walking as a method of research and practice in the humanities and creative arts, emerging from a recent surge of growth in urban and rural walking.
Details
ISBN/GTIN978-1-032-40095-2
ProduktartTaschenbuch
EinbandartKartoniert, Paperback
FormatTrade Paperback (USA)
Erscheinungsjahr2022
Erscheinungsdatum29.08.2022
Seiten248 Seiten
SpracheEnglisch
MasseBreite 155 mm, Höhe 231 mm, Dicke 15 mm
Gewicht340 g
Artikel-Nr.9687874
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Inhalt/Kritik

Inhaltsverzeichnis
AcknowledgementsList of ContributorsIntroductionAnna Stenning and Pippa Marland PART I Walking in: lines, contours, pilgrimages 1. Walking in (900 questions concerning walking)Gerry Loose2. Lines, walks, and getting lost: contemporary poetry and walking Garry Mackenzie 3. Photographic essay: contouring alone and with a companion in the Dark Peak, Derbyshire between September 2014 and November 2017Alison Lloyd 4. Walking and theatricality: an experiment in weathered thinking (kairos)Cari Lavery5. Ghosts of the Restless Shore: a personal pilgrimage Mike CollierPart II Walking with: people, places, politics 6. "This world that walks": cultural destruction, cultural renewal, and social justice on the trails of North American Indigenous removal Amy Hamilton7. The trouble with Munro bagging: summiting as erasure in the Highlands of Scotland Christos Galanis8. Black Men Walking: an interview with Dawn Walton and TestamentPippa Marland and Anna Stenning 9. The Walking Library for Women WalkingDeirdre Heddon and Misha Myers10. Walking backwards: art between places in twenty-first-century Britain Judith TuckerPart III Walking on: routes, directions, steps11. Autism and cognitive embodiment: steps towards a non-ableist walking literatureAnna Stenning 12. Walking with the digital: Heartlands - 'Ere Be Dragons and A Conversation Between TreesRachel Jacobs, Pippa Marland and Steve Benford 13. The crisis in psychogeographical walking: from paranoia to diversity, ecology and salvagePhil Smith14. Mountaineering literature as dark pastoralTerry Gifford 15. Walking onGerry Loose Indexmehr

Autor

David Borthwick teaches Environmental Humanities at the University of Glasgow's School of Interdisciplinary Studies. Previous publications have centred on ecopoetry, walking and cultural understandings of avian migration. He has also published poetry and non-fiction. His current research uses poetry and non-fiction to examine the depictions of the multivalent nature of place - and the future of place-based thinking.

Anna Stenning is a Wellcome Trust Research Fellow in the Humanities and Social Sciences at Bath Spa University. She has written about nature writing, poetry and disability studies, and she has published both her own poetry and creative non-fiction. Her current research focuses on representations of autistic flourishing, narrativity and eco-anxiety, and she is the author of Nature, Place and Affect: The Poetic Affinities of Edward Thomas and Robert Frost 1912-1917 for Rowman & Littlefield International. She is also a co-editor, with Nick Chown and Hanna Bertilsdotter-Rosqvist, of Routledge's interdisciplinary collection Neurodiversity: A New Critical Paradigm.

Pippa Marland is a Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellow based at the University of Leeds, where she is a member of the Environmental Humanities Research Group. Her research project is a study of the representation of farming in modern British nature writing. She has published widely on ecocriticism, ecopoetry and nature writing, and is currently preparing a monograph for publication entitled Ecocriticism and the Island: Readings from the British-Irish Archipelago for the Rowman & Littlefield Rethinking the Island series.