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walknow

The website walknowtracks.co.uk serves as an archive and resource focused on walking routes primarily within the United Kingdom. It catalogues a diverse range of walks, emphasizing detailed route maps, descriptions, and geographical points of interest along each path. The platform integrates cultural and historical contexts related to the routes, enriching the understanding of the landscapes and communities encountered during the walks. The site also enables users to access walking tracks with GPS data, supporting an intersection of digital navigation and traditional walking practices.

Additionally, walknowtracks.co.uk functions as a hub for walking enthusiasts and researchers interested in exploring how walking intersects with cultural geography and spatial experience. Through its curated walks, the site documents the relationship between physical movement across terrains and the cultural narratives embedded within those spaces. This approach reflects the broader field of walking art, where walking is both an act of exploration and a method of engaging with place-specific stories, heritage, and environment.

cultural geography

Collection · 58 items
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Historical

Sub-collection · 13 items

spatiality

Collection · 19 items
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walking routes

Sub-collection · 17 items

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pedestrian – Pedestrian Blog

The URL leads to the Pedestrian Blog hosted on Sandra Cowan’s website, which focuses on themes related to walking, art, and urban space. The blog features reflections, essays, and project documentation that explore walking as a cultural and artistic practice. It engages with the ways pedestrian movement intersects with environmental, social, and spatial contexts, often considering walking as a method of inquiry and creative expression within the urban landscape. The entries include discussions on walking art projects, public space interventions, and the experiential qualities of navigating city environments on foot. The blog situates these practices within broader discourses of cultural geography and environmental psychology, highlighting the significance of walking in understanding place, identity, and community dynamics. It serves as a resource for those interested in the intersections of art, geography, and pedestrian culture.

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IMPRINTABLE

Imprintable.org is an online platform dedicated to the study and documentation of walking as a practice intersecting with art and cultural geography. The site features a diverse collection of projects, essays, maps, and multimedia that explore walking’s role in shaping spatial experience, memory, and identity. It serves as an archival and research resource that highlights interdisciplinary approaches to understanding walking beyond its utilitarian function, focusing on its cultural, environmental, and artistic dimensions. The platform also includes critical reflections on walking as a form of social and political engagement, examining how pedestrian movement interacts with urban landscapes, public spaces, and social histories. Imprintable.org engages contributors from multiple fields, including artists, geographers, anthropologists, and historians, to provide a nuanced understanding of walking's imprint on cultural and geographical practices.

walkingevent

Ethical Matters:The Lost Paths: A History of How We Walk from Here to There

Hundreds of thousands of miles of paths reach into, and connect, communities across England and Wales. By 2026, 10,000 miles of undiscovered footpaths around Britain stand to be lost. Jack Cornish has dedicated the last five years of his life to walking these forgotten routes. It is Jack’s hope that the result, his book The Lost Paths, will show just

Jack Cornish
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Meet Morag, author of The Feminist Art of Walking

Here’s an invitation that we know you won’t be able to refuse: Morag Rose offers a huge thank you to everyone who has helped make The Feminist Art of Walking. Tickets are now available for all dates on her book publicity tour – your chance to meet Morag in person*: Juno Books, Sheffield Saturday 18th

Morag Rose

driftsinging

Drawing with (vocal) sound in response to place while passing through place. Driftsinging borrows from the Situationist Drift, and Baudelaire’s flâneur. Driftsinging also relates to the process of ‘sounding,’ the sonic measuring of distance and depth that locates position in place and ‘echo location’, the examination of place through sonic reflection and refraction, resonance and echo.

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