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Stephanie Springgay, S. Truman (2018)
On the Need for Methods Beyond Proceduralism: Speculative Middles, (In)Tensions, and Response-Ability in ResearchQualitative Inquiry, 24
E. Manning, B. Massumi (2014)
Thought in the Act: Passages in the Ecology of Experience
(2018)
Truman, Walking Methodologies in a More-Than-Human World: WalkingLab (New York: Routledge, 2018)
Deirdre Heddon, Cathy Turner (2012)
Walking Women: Shifting the Tales and Scales of MobilityContemporary Theatre Review, 22
Stephanie Springgay, S. Truman (2017)
A Transmaterial Approach to Walking MethodologiesBody & Society, 23
Vanessa Watts (2017)
Indigenous place-thought & agency amongst humans and non-humans (First Woman and Sky Woman go on a European world tour!)Re-visiones
John Wylie (2005)
A single day's walking: narrating self and landscape on the South West Coast PathTransactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 30
(2019)
CANVAS: The Intimacies of Doing Research-Creation
S. Truman, Stephanie Springgay (2015)
The Primacy of Movement in Research-Creation: New Materialist Approaches to Art Research and Pedagogy
(2019)
The Intimacies of Doing Research-Creation’, in N
Vagabond capitalism
C. Katz (2001)
Vagabond Capitalism and the Necessity of Social ReproductionAntipode, 33
Rebecca Solnit (2000)
Wanderlust: A History of Walking
(2016)
Olympic Homonationalisms
TH&B is the name of the former railway that ran along the Toronto, Hamilton and Buffalo corridor, and its initialism can still be seen marked on many of the railway bridges in the city of Hamilton
The Underground Railroad wasn't a system of rails or trains but a loose organization of freed slaves and abolitionists who harbored fugitive slaves
Stephanie Springgay, S. Truman (2017)
Stone Walks: inhuman animacies and queer archives of feelingDiscourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 38
Stephanie Springgay (2018)
‘How to Write as Felt’ Touching Transmaterialities and More-Than-Human IntimaciesStudies in Philosophy and Education, 38
S. Truman, Stephanie Springgay (2016)
Propositions For Walking Research
The Conestoga Massacre of 1763 marks a number of bloody massacre of Conestogas by Scotch-Irish men called the Paxton boys including the slaughter of fourteen Indigenous men in the jail
This article outlines a method we call Queer Walking Tours as site-specific research-creation events. It gives a brief overview of the Queer Walking Tours as method and then describes one specific tour that explored the concepts ‘Migration, Militarisms, and Speculative Geology’. Queer Walking Tours offer cultural geography and a range of other disciplines and fields a form of place-based research that draws on Indigenous, anti-racist, feminist, and queer frameworks to open up different conversations around the notion of place.
Cultural Geographies – SAGE
Published: Oct 1, 2019
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