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Interseriality and Different Sorts of Walking: Suggestions for a Relational Approach to Urban Walking

In this article, we attempt to develop a meta-language for a relational approach to urban walking that is able to account for walking as a mutable, embodied, materially heterogeneous and distributed activity. Following the perspective on walking as developed in a series of articles by Jennie Middlet...

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Published in:Mobilities 2017-01, Vol.12 (1), p.20-35
Main Authors: Kärrholm, Mattias, Johansson, Maria, Lindelöw, David, Ferreira, Inês A.
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Language:English
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description In this article, we attempt to develop a meta-language for a relational approach to urban walking that is able to account for walking as a mutable, embodied, materially heterogeneous and distributed activity. Following the perspective on walking as developed in a series of articles by Jennie Middleton, we develop a notion of the walker as a socio-technical assemblage. By recognising walking as an ongoing relation of different series of walking assemblages or 'sorts of walking', it becomes possible to study the mediation of these series through the focus on objects of passage: things or triggers that transform one walking assemblage into another via the process of appraisal. We suggest interseriality as a concept capable of handling a 'relation of relations'; i.e. how different sorts of walking relate to one another and how the ongoing transformation of a walking assemblage ultimately also produces a mutable but sustaining walking person. Finally, we suggest a focus on boundary objects. Since walking assemblages cannot help but to transform in order to sustain, walks always include a series of different sorts of walking: the possible co-presence of different sorts of walking thus depends on boundary objects.
doi_str_mv 10.1080/17450101.2014.969596
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source Taylor & Francis; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Annan samhällsvetenskap
Assemblages
Materiality
Other Social Sciences
Samhällsvetenskap
Shared space
Social Sciences
Urban areas
Urban walking
Walking
Walking studies
title Interseriality and Different Sorts of Walking: Suggestions for a Relational Approach to Urban Walking
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