ABSTRACT

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. This edited collection of essays from leading figures in the field presents an enquiry into, and a critique of, the methods and results of cutting-edge ‘walking research’. Walking negotiates the intersections between the human self, place and space, offering a cross-disciplinary collaborative method of research which can be utilised in areas such as ecocriticism, landscape architecture, literature, cultural geography and the visual arts. Bringing together a multitude of perspectives from different disciplines, on topics including health and wellbeing, disability studies, social justice, ecology and gender, this book provides a unique appraisal of the humanist perspective on landscape. In doing so, it challenges Romantic approaches to walking, applying new ideas in contemporary critical thought and alternative perspectives on embodiment and trans-corporeality.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

part I|56 pages

Walking in

chapter 1|2 pages

Walking in

(900 questions concerning walking)

chapter 2|13 pages

Lines, walks and getting lost

Contemporary poetry and walking

chapter 3|8 pages

Photographic essay

Contouring alone and with a companion in the Dark Peak, Derbyshire between September 2014 and November 2017

chapter 4|15 pages

Walking and theatricality

An experiment in weathered thinking (kairos)

chapter 5|16 pages

Ghosts of the Restless Shore

A personal pilgrimage

part II|80 pages

Walking with

chapter 6|14 pages

“This world that walks”

Cultural destruction, cultural renewal, and social justice on the trails of North American Indigenous removal

chapter 7|17 pages

The trouble with Munro bagging

Summiting as erasure in the Highlands of Scotland

chapter 8|13 pages

Black Men Walking

An interview with Dawn Walton and Testament

chapter 10|20 pages

Walking backwards

Art between places in twenty-first-century Britain

part III|75 pages

Walking on

chapter 11|19 pages

Autism and cognitive embodiment

Steps towards a non-ableist walking literature

chapter 12|19 pages

Walking with the digital

Heartlands – ’Ere Be Dragons and A Conversation Between Trees

chapter 13|16 pages

The crisis in psychogeographical walking

From paranoia to diversity, ecology and salvage

chapter 15|5 pages

Walking on