Authors: Maggie O’Neill and Brian Roberts
Publication Date: 2020
Description from publisher:
“This book introduces and critically explores walking as an innovative method for doing social research, showing how its sensate and kinaesthetic attributes facilitate connections with lived experiences, journeys and memories, communities and identities. The book situates walking methods historically, sociologically, and in relation to biographical and arts-based research, as well as new work on mobilities, the digital, spatial, and the sensory.
The book is organised into three sections: theorising; experiencing; and imagining walking as a new method for doing biographical research. There is a key focus upon the Walking Interview as a Biographical Method (WIBM) on the move to usefully explore migration, memory, and urban landscapes, as part of participatory, visual, and ethnographic research with marginalised communities and artists and as re-formative and transgressive. The book concludes with autobiographical walks taken by the authors and a discussion about the future of the walking interview as biographical method.
Walking Methods combines theory with a series of original ethnographic and participatory research examples. Practical exercises and a guide to using walking as a method help to make this a rich resource for social science researchers, students, walking artists, and biographical researchers.”
Publisher link: https://www.routledge.com/Walking-Methods-Biographical-Research-on-the-Move-1st-Edition/ONeill-Roberts/p/book/9781138182486
Key reason(s) to include in the MobileWorlds library:
Both the methodology (philosophy of how we do research) and the methods described in this book inspire and are applied in the MobileWorlds project. Walking methods have inspired especially our mobile interviews – frequently, though not always, involving walking. One of the MobileWorlds key hypotheses is that it is through such methods that researchers can really begin to grasp at how cultures intertwine in the everyday experiences of people, and this book has been a great resource for thinking through how this can be explored.

