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Lines of Inquiry: Multidisciplinary Methodologies in Drawing and Education [Kõva köide]

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  • Formaat: Hardback, 258 pages, kõrgus x laius: 244x170 mm, 16 Halftones, color; 91 Halftones, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Jul-2026
  • Kirjastus: Intellect Books
  • ISBN-10: 1835952593
  • ISBN-13: 9781835952597
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 258 pages, kõrgus x laius: 244x170 mm, 16 Halftones, color; 91 Halftones, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Jul-2026
  • Kirjastus: Intellect Books
  • ISBN-10: 1835952593
  • ISBN-13: 9781835952597
Teised raamatud teemal:
A groundbreaking international collection that redefines drawing as a powerful tool for thinking, feeling, and connecting across disciplines, cultures, and experiences.

Bringing together essays by researchers, scholars, and artists from nine countries, including teachers, architects, psychotherapists, museum educators, and curators, this book draws on each contributor’s unique position and practice to showcase diverse perspectives on the collaborative and interpretive power of drawing. The collection unfolds as a journey through the many forms and functions of drawing, exploring practices as varied as mapping a daily route, marking territory, expressing personal experience, diagramming problems through arrows and lines, creating comics, or imagining abstract boundaries of power. These diverse approaches invite readers to reconsider what drawing is and what it can do.

Whether capturing lived experience, conveying emotion, constructing knowledge, or challenging systems of authority, the contributions reveal drawing’s unique capacity to generate meaning beyond words. Through engaging and compelling case studies, the book encourages both scholars and practitioners to see drawing as a tool for empathy, critical inquiry, and alternative ways of knowing—especially when navigating what lies beyond the limits of our own perspectives.
List of Figures





Drawing Multi-disciplinary Lines of Inquiry through Global Conversations

Tracey Bowen and Tessa Berg




Drawing as an Active Learning Pedagogical Tool to Understand Visual
Plagiarism

Lisa Winstanley and Jesse John Thompson




Conversational Drawing: The Landscape Architecture Project

Nicole Valois




Agenda 2030 for a Sustainable Future Visualized through Cartoon Strips

Margaretha Haggstrom and Kerstin Ahlberg




Valuing Drawing as Data and Inquiry: Drawings and Rich Pictures Alongside
Poetry and Storytelling within an Inventive Methodology

Margaret Wadsley
When Your Feet Never Touch the Ground: Drawing as a Tool to Investigate
Perspectives on Encounters with the Natural Environment

Joan Marie Kelly


Drawing as a Bodily Experience

Anna Carin Hedberg and Rikke Lundgreen




From Home to School: Using Children's Drawings to Explore Language and
Schooling Experiences in a Bilingual Setting


Maretta Sidiropoulou, Sofia Vlahou, and Trifaini Sidiropoulou-Kanellou



 





A Generative Drawing Methodology: The Design, Development and Protocol to
Explore Self-Aging

Curie Scott




Interwoven Lines of Violence and Care: Exercises in Drawing, Reflection, and
Telling Stories

Madison Lindsay


 





Drawing as a Sentimental Writing

Anthi Kosma


 





Blubilds: Drawing out Specific Embodiments

Joanna Leah


 



Notes on Contributors
Tracey Bowen is a Professor, Teaching Stream Emerita in the Institute of Communication, Culture, Information, and Technology at the University of Toronto Mississauga. She is also a mixed media artist. Her research focuses on visual rhetoric, visual metaphor, and drawing as a research methodology and has been published in Visual Communication, Metaphor and Symbol, Studies in Art Education, Studies in Higher Education and Higher Education Research and Development.





Dr. Tessa Berg is an Associate Professor at Heriot Watt University in Scotland within the School of Mathematical and Computer Sciences. Her research interests are in information systems and socio-technical analysis with specific interest in using pictures and iconography to identify complex systems of human understanding. Dr Berg has a keen interest in collaborative methods of engagement and has helped pioneer a number of modern approaches to participatory methodologies such as Rich Picture analysis. Dr Berg has been involved in research and development projects across Europe, the Mediterranean, Africa and Asia.