This book considers the generative tension between the materiality and virtuality of walking methodologies in a/r/tography and arts-based educational research. It explores the materiality of practice—manifestations, manipulations, residues, and traces of both real and imagined experiences and events. Authors present artistic representations, renderings, artifacts, and documentations that allow for various forms of return and re-visitation of places/spaces and temporal moments. The book also investigates the digital and virtual, including video, images, media work, and emergent technologies that allow one to literally, metaphorically, affectively, and conceptually go somewhere that might be previously impossible to reach. Authors consider curricular and pedagogical implications of digital/virtual walking in relation to desire, agency, autonomy, freedom, and other issues around ethics.
The book brings together entanglements of the corporeal and incorporeal, addressing the questions: How does the (im)materiality of bodies/characters-in-motion in a/r/tographic practices shape understandings of place, space, and the self-in-relation? How do issues and particularities come to matter through one’s entanglements with(in) the (in)corporeal?
“The editors of Material and Digital A/r/tographic Explorations have carefully curated a collection that engages readers in the world of a/r/tography and walking, which provoke, challenge, and respond to each other. This collection fosters engagement and understanding for graduate researchers, professors, artists, and those new to a/r/tography and walking as a methodology. This book challenges us to embrace new ways of exploring and engaging with the material and digital in art education, making it a transformative and ethically-driven addition to the a/r/tographic corpus.” — Kathryn Coleman, Associate Professor, Art Education, The University of Melbourne
“The editors of this thought-provoking and arresting collection have assembled a textured and authentically international suite of art educators as authors that explore a/r/tographic walking in relation. The book engages textual and digital materialities such as GPS collage, digital imagery, AI, and other virtual platforms together with conventional approaches of deeply affective and photographic recordings and documented forms, as mappings, trails, and schemas. Visually rich, this book explores the materiality of practice, of turning and returning, visiting and revisiting, mapping and moving—drawing the reader affectively and effectively to consider a/r/tography and walking as ways to open each other’s potentialities.” — Alexandra Lasczik, Professor of Arts & Education, Southern Cross University
This book considers the generative tension between the materiality and virtuality of walking methodologies in a/r/tography and arts-based educational research. It explores the materiality of practice—manifestations, manipulations, residues, and traces of both real and imagined experiences and events. Authors present artistic representations, renderings, artifacts, and documentations that allow for various forms of return and re-visitation of places/spaces and temporal moments. The book also investigates the digital and virtual, including video, images, media work, and emergent technologies that allow one to literally, metaphorically, affectively, and conceptually go somewhere that might be previously impossible to reach. Authors consider curricular and pedagogical implications of digital/virtual walking in relation to desire, agency, autonomy, freedom, and other issues around ethics.
The book brings together entanglements of the corporeal and incorporeal, addressing thequestions: How does the (im)materiality of bodies/characters-in-motion in a/r/tographic practices shape understandings of place, space, and the self-in-relation? How do issues and particularities come to matter through one’s entanglements with(in) the (in)corporeal?
Nicole Y.S. Lee
walking methodologies in a/r/tography a/r/tographic practice a/r/tographic walking practices materiality of practice arts-based educational research walking and curriculum walking and pedagogy relational walking Decentering/Troubling Walking Pedagogical Walking Poetic Walking
“The editors of Material and Digital A/r/tographic Explorations have carefully curated a collection that engages readers in the world of a/r/tography and walking, which provoke, challenge, and respond to each other. The book is organised into four important sections—Relational Walking, Decentering/Troubling Walking, Pedagogical Walking, and Poetic Walking—that build upon one another, showcasing anti-colonial practices and their impact on research. The interludes provide moments for reflection and offer breathing space, allowing readers to contemplate the cultural, linguistic, political, and pedagogical aspects of the research. The contributing authors—both experienced and emerging scholars—present fresh perspectives on a/r/tography and walking in diverse and dynamic environments with each chapter further developing upon the other through new theoretical, sociological, and philosophical entanglements. This collection fosters engagement and understanding for graduate researchers,professors, artists, and those new to a/r/tography and walking as a methodology. The book’s creation during the early years of the pandemic underscores the significance of our connection to the environment and our bodies, encouraging readers to reflect on their own interconnections with the human and non-human worlds. Walking Matters challenges us to embrace new ways of exploring and engaging with the material and digital in art education, making it a transformative and ethically-driven addition to the a/r/tographic corpus.” — Kathryn Coleman, Associate Professor, Art Education, The University of Melbourne
“The editors of this thought-provoking and arresting collection have assembled a textured and authentically international suite of art educators as authors that explore a/r/tographic walking in relation. The various chapters engage textual and digital materialities such as GPS collage, digital imagery, AI, and other virtual platforms together with conventional approaches of deeply affective and photographic recordings and documented forms, as mappings, trails, and schemas. Visually rich, the collection explores the materiality of practice, of turning and returning, visiting and revisiting, mapping and moving—drawing the reader affectively and effectively to consider a/r/tography and walking as ways to open each other’s potentialities. The agentic movements and material engagements with, between, and through myriad entanglements with the human, the nonhuman, and more-than-human are explored through complex, scholarly advancements spilling over with vibrant possibility. This collection is a timely and important addition to the corpus of publications that have emerged prolifically from the SSHRC-funded Mapping A/r/tography Project.” — Alexandra Lasczik, Professor of Arts & Education, Southern Cross University
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