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E-raamat: Walking and Leisure: Mobilities, Encounters and Critical Engagements

Edited by (University of Glasgow, UK)
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This book critically examines walking as a socially and politically situated leisure practice, exploring how movement through urban and rural spaces is shaped by broader structures of power and inequality.

While walking is often framed as a leisure activity with physical and mental health benefits, this volume foregrounds its role as an embodied practice deeply influenced by intersecting factors such as class, race, gender, age, and disability. Drawing on interdisciplinary theoretical perspectives and innovative methodological approaches, the chapters present empirically rich case studies from diverse global contexts—including the UK, Australia, Canada, Ireland, the Czech Republic, Austria, Hong Kong, and Thailand. These studies range from pandemic walking and app-guided navigation to the experiences of mothers, disabled individuals, older adults, people with cancer, Black women, and those walking with animals. Together, they illuminate how walking practices negotiate space, place, identity, and belonging, while also exposing spatial exclusions and embodied constraints.

Walking and Leisure offers a significant contribution to the sociology of leisure, human geography, cultural studies, and critical disability studies. It will be of particular interest to scholars and students engaged in research on mobility, embodiment, and the everyday politics of place and space.



This book critically examines walking as a socially and politically situated leisure practice, exploring how movement through urban and rural spaces is shaped by broader structures of power and inequality.

Introduction: Leisurely Walking Part I: Mobilities
1. Where is the
Leisure When Walking with a Baby?: Unruly and Leaky Bodies
2. Disabled
Mobilities and Critical Embodied Entanglements in the Park: Walk this Way
3.
The Queer Politics of Walking with Digital Technologies
4. Race, Nature, and
Historical Memory: Walking Hadrians Wall
5. The Role of the Erotic in Black
Womens Leisure Part II: Encounters
6. Walking with Cancer, Walking with my
Father
7. Walking and Stopping Together in the Carceral Landscape of the Isle
of Portland
8. Walking with a Cat: Feline Exercise as a Challenge to
Established Norms in Urban Environments
9. Storying a Place through Walking
and Alternative Map Making with Others
10. The Importance of Everyday Walking
Routines for Ageing Well in Place Part III: Critical Engagements
11. Walking
In the Spatial Order of Automobility
12. Creative Walking: Repetition, Rhythm
and Respite in Pandemic Times
13. Reimagining the City Walking Tour to
Stimulate a Critical Engagement with Place
14. Walking as a Socio-political
Form of Transforming Civic Experience: Slippage of Leisure
Miriam Snellgrove is a Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Glasgow, UK. Her research explores the everyday politics and pleasures of leisureparticularly walking, swimming and the mindsport bridgethrough qualitative methodologies including ethnography, poetry, diaries and interviews. She is particularly interested in collaborative research that foregrounds the lived experiences of participants and examines how leisure intersects with social inequalities. Her work contributes to wider discussions on methodological innovation and the sociological significance of everyday leisure.