This article offers an autoethnographic account of developing a multidisciplinary feminist local history project. In particular it focuses on the construction and delivery of a walking tour celebrating ‘Manchester’s Modernist Heroines’. These were ten women from Greater Manchester, UK, who achieved professional success in the twentieth century. The author evokes ideas of psychogeography and the dérive to produce a tour with collaboration, accessibility and public participation at the heart of its ethos. However the notion of a psychogeographical heritage tour is an oxymoron as the praxis resists essentialist notions of time and space. Additionally, the women featured did not have blue plaques, stately homes or any of the conventional badges...
The flâneur concept, associated with the androcentric account of modernity and the division of spat...
This article offers a study of the Hackney Flashers' project Who's Holding the Baby? (1976–1978). Th...
Taking the example of the German feminist activist Käthe Schirmacher (1865-1930), the article explor...
This article offers an autoethnographic account of developing a multidisciplinary feminist local his...
Psychogeography has long been a male dominated field, incorporating the male perspective of the flân...
Spinning a Yarn is a major outcome of an on going ten-year research project in Manchester. Throu...
As part of GPC’s 25-year anniversary celebrations, this article explores possibilities and prospects...
The article traces the beginnings and early history of feminist geography in the United Kingdom thro...
Narratives attached to walking practices, influenced by the Romantic, Naturalist and avant-garde mov...
This article defines feminism's enduring aim as one of abolishing discrimination or exclusion on the...
Trails and Tails was a heritage project run by East Dunbartonshire Council. Built around community e...
The built heritage of most cities is heterogeneous, hybrid and multiple. However, certain heritage o...
This paper explores how innovative ways of mapping both the presence and the agency of contemporary ...
Using photographs, this paper explores the gendered link between transport and the urban environmen...
In the early 1970s, artists in London worked together to establish studios in former industrial bu...
The flâneur concept, associated with the androcentric account of modernity and the division of spat...
This article offers a study of the Hackney Flashers' project Who's Holding the Baby? (1976–1978). Th...
Taking the example of the German feminist activist Käthe Schirmacher (1865-1930), the article explor...
This article offers an autoethnographic account of developing a multidisciplinary feminist local his...
Psychogeography has long been a male dominated field, incorporating the male perspective of the flân...
Spinning a Yarn is a major outcome of an on going ten-year research project in Manchester. Throu...
As part of GPC’s 25-year anniversary celebrations, this article explores possibilities and prospects...
The article traces the beginnings and early history of feminist geography in the United Kingdom thro...
Narratives attached to walking practices, influenced by the Romantic, Naturalist and avant-garde mov...
This article defines feminism's enduring aim as one of abolishing discrimination or exclusion on the...
Trails and Tails was a heritage project run by East Dunbartonshire Council. Built around community e...
The built heritage of most cities is heterogeneous, hybrid and multiple. However, certain heritage o...
This paper explores how innovative ways of mapping both the presence and the agency of contemporary ...
Using photographs, this paper explores the gendered link between transport and the urban environmen...
In the early 1970s, artists in London worked together to establish studios in former industrial bu...
The flâneur concept, associated with the androcentric account of modernity and the division of spat...
This article offers a study of the Hackney Flashers' project Who's Holding the Baby? (1976–1978). Th...
Taking the example of the German feminist activist Käthe Schirmacher (1865-1930), the article explor...