Walking and the Pedestrian in Literature and Social Practice: Foot Notes
By (Author) Andre Furlani
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
2nd April 2026
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary studies: postcolonial literature
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers
Hardback
264
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Lively, adventurous and comprehensive, this book offers a fascinating account of the contemporary culture of pedestrianism and serves as both investigation and celebration of walking and its literature.
Pedestrians have joined the forward ranks of current political debate, social thought and aesthetic practice, with consequences that this book illuminates in literature, art, digital culture and political life from around the globe. Ingeniously structured around the root word 'gress', chapters move through ingress, egress, progress, regress, aggress, congress, digress, transgress and gress itself to touch on matters as diverse as walking as a political and activist activity; notions of pilgrimage; matters of race and indigineity; animal studies; environmental studies; and digital culture. Extraordinarily comprehensive in its coverage, it examines works by writers including W G Sebald; Anne Carson; Chinua Achebe; Cormac McCarthy; Jamaica Kincaid; Paul Celan; Arundhati Roy; Norman Mailer and many more.
While its subject is as timeless as the Pliocene footprints preserved in the tuff of Laetoli it is also as timely as lockdown, social distancing, pedestrian-repurposed commercial streets and the anti-racism marches. It demonstrates the scale, diversity and impact of the extensive contemporary walking literature and art in the context of the social forces and politics this resurgence enables.
Andre Furlani is Full Professor in the Department of English at Concordia University, Canada.