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E-raamat: Routledge International Handbook of Walking

Edited by , Edited by (Hebrew University, Israel), Edited by (University of Canterbury, New Zealand)
  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Jul-2017
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317271116
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Jul-2017
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317271116

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Walking is an essentially human activity. From a basic means of transport and opportunity for leisure through to being a religious act, walking has served as a significant philosophical, literary and historical subject. Thoreau’s 1851 lecture on Walking or the Romantic walks of the Wordsworths at Grasmere in the early 19th Century, for example, helped create a philosophical foundation for the importance of the act of walking as an act of engagement with nature. Similarly, and sometimes inseparable from secular appreciation, pilgrimage trails provide opportunities for finding self and others in the travails of the walk. More recently, walking has been embraced as a means of encouraging greater health and well-being, community improvement and more sustainable means of travel. Yet despite the significance of the subject of walking there is as yet no integrated treatment of the subject in the social science literature.

This handbook therefore brings together a number of the main themes on the study of walking from different disciplines and literatures into a single volume that can be accessed from across the social sciences. It is divided into five main sections: culture, society and historical context; social practices, perceptions and behaviours; hiking trails and pilgrimage routes; health, well-being and psychology; and method, planning and design. Each of these highlights current approaches and major themes in research on walking in a range of different environments.

This handbook carves out a unique niche in the study of walking. The international and cross-disciplinary nature of the contributions of the book are expected to be of interest to numerous academic fields in the social and health sciences, as well as to urban and regional planners and those in charge of the management of outdoor recreation and tourism globally.

List of figures
xi
List of tables
xii
List of contributors
xiv
Preface and acknowledgements xix
1 Introduction: walking -- more than pedestrian
1(24)
C. Michael Hall
Yael Ram
Noam Shoval
PART I Culture, Society and Historical Context
25(56)
2 Walking in the capitalist city: on the socio-economic origins of walkable urbanism
27(10)
Anja Halg Bieri
3 Radical twenty-first-century walkers and the Romantic qualities of leisure walking
37(9)
Phil Smith
4 Long-distance walking in films: promises of healing and redemption on the trail
46(9)
Warwick Frost
Jennifer Laing
5 Walking as pedagogy
55(10)
Karein K. Goertz
6 Walking in Germany: between recreation and ideology
65(9)
Dirk Reiser
Vanessa Jansen-Meinen
7 Walking and art: perambulating pleasures
74(7)
Ray Boland
Brian Wheeller
PART II Social Practices, Perceptions and Behaviours
81(76)
8 Dog walking as a leisure activity
83(9)
Yoshitaka Iwasaki
9 Walking in Switzerland: urban and not so leisurely
92(8)
Derek P.T.H. Christie
Emmanuel Ravalet
Vincent Kaufmann
10 Purposeful leisure mobilities: reframing the walk to school
100(9)
Debbie Hopkins
Sandra Mandic
11 Spiking: the quest for challenge and meaning among hikers
109(10)
Ron McCarville
Chantel Pilon
12 On the beaten track: how do narratives from organised hiking differ from "real" hiking narratives?
119(8)
Outi Rantala
Seija Tuulentie
13 Comparisons between hikers and non-hikers in Iceland: attitudes, behaviours and perceptions
127(10)
Anna Dora Soeporsdottir
C. Michael Hall
Dorkell Stefansson
14 Passeggiata nuova: social travel in the era of the smartphone
137(10)
Andrew Mondschein
15 Walking online: a netnography of China's emerging hiking communities
147(10)
Alexandra Witte
Kevin Hannam
PART III Hiking Trails and Pilgrimage Routes
157(94)
16 Hut-to-hut-hiking trails: a comparative analysis of popular hiking destinations
159(13)
Sven Gross
Kim Werner
17 Taking you home: the Masar Ibrahim Al-Khalil in Palestine
172(12)
Rami K. Isaac
18 The Wales Coast Path: the world's first national coastal footpath
184(10)
Stephen Miles
19 Improving the experience quality of hiking trails: a setting-experience-relationship approach
194(12)
Diana Muller
Heinz-Dieter Quack
Kathrin Schumacher
Franziska Thiele
20 Hikers' preferences and DMO strategies: contrasting perspectives and conflicting views?
206(9)
Ingeborg M. Nordbø
21 Re-signifying smuggling: cross-border walking trails as a tourist experience in the Spanish---Portuguese border
215(8)
Heriberto Cairo
Maria Lois
22 The solo-hike: a journey of distance and closeness
223(9)
Hannelene Schilar
23 Walking to care: pilgrimage as a slow tourism development -- Kumano-kodo pilgrimage, Wakayama, Japan
232(10)
Kumi Kato
24 Hindu pilgrimage in India and walkability: theory and praxis
242(9)
Subhajit Das
Manirul Islam
PART IV Health, Well-being and Psychology
251(58)
25 Rambling on: exploring the complexity of walking as a meaningful activity
253(11)
Kirsty Finnie
Tania Wiseman
Neil Ravenscroft
26 Life-changing walks of mid-life adults
264(10)
Robert Saunders
Betty Weiler
Jennifer Laing
27 Walking to promote increased physical activity
274(14)
Ian Patterson
Shane Pegg
Wan Rabiah Wan Omar
28 Taking the first step: from physical inactivity towards a healthier lifestyle through leisure walking
288(12)
Miia Grenman
Juulia Raikkonen
29 Dog walking in urban greenspaces
300(9)
Giovanna Bertella
PART V Method, Planning and Design
309(104)
30 Walkable places for visitors: assessing and designing for walkability
311(19)
Yael Ram
C. Michael Hall
31 Walking on the shoulders of giants: historical mountain trails as management tools?
330(10)
Daniel Svensson
Sverker Sorlin
Annika Dahlberg
Peter Fredman
Sandra Wall-Reinius
32 Wayfinding design for rural flanerie in France
340(10)
Helene Ducros
33 Community benefits from walking tourism in Western Norway
350(10)
Merete Kvamme Fabritius
34 When walking is no longer possible: investigating crowding and coping practices in urban tourism using commented walks
360(9)
Monika Popp
35 Assessing the walkability of urban public space with GIS technology: the hidden dimensions of security and community heritage
369(10)
Peter Schofield
Adele Doran
Ray Nolan
36 Developing a spatial pattern analysis method for evaluating trails in the mountains: the case of Beban Pass in Tierra del Fuego, Argentina
379(11)
Marisol Vereda
Maria Laura Borla
37 Improving the walkability of the Camino
390(13)
Xose Somoza-Medina
Ruben Camilo Lois Gonzalez
38 Walk on: conclusions and the future
403(10)
C. Michael Hall
Yael Ram
Index 413
C. Michael Hall is Professor of Marketing, University of Canterbury, New Zealand; Docent in Geography, Oulu University; Visiting Professor, Linneaus University; and Senior Research Fellow, University of Johannesburg. Author and editor of over 80 books, he has published widely on tourism, sustainability, governance and food issues.

Yael Ram is Senior Lecturer at the Department of Tourism Studies, Ashkelon Academic College, Israel.

Noam Shoval is Professor of Geography at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel.