This report, the final in the current series, reviews recent scholarship in health geography that engages with more-than-representational pushes and expressions towards and against health. Attention is paid to the ‘onflow’ of space, time, matter and experience, and to specific qualities it lays down (speeds, momentums, rhythms, spacings and lines of action, encounters and infections). Attention is also paid to some methodological innovations that have been deployed in exposing these qualities.
AndersonB (2006) Becoming and being hopeful: Towards a theory of affect. Environment and Planning D24(5): 733–752.
2.
AndersonJ (2014) Exploring the space between words and meaning: Understanding the relational sensibility of surf spaces. Emotion, Space and Society10: 27–34.
3.
AndrewsGJ (2007) Spaces of dizziness and dread: Navigating acrophobia. Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography89(4): 307–317.
4.
AndrewsGJ (2017) From post-game to play-by-play: Animating sports movement-space. Progress in Human Geography41(6): 766–794.
5.
AndrewsGJ (2018) Non-Representational Theory & Health: The Health in Life in Space-Time Revealing. London: Routledge.
6.
AndrewsGJ (2019a) Health geographies II: The posthuman turn. Progress in Human Geography43(6): 1109–1119.
7.
AndrewsGJ (2019b) Spinning, hurting, still, afraid: Living life spaces with Type I Chiari Malformation. Social Science & Medicine231: 13–21.
8.
AndrewsGJ (2020) Onflow: The Fundamental Freedom, the Event (currently an unsubmitted manuscript).
9.
AndrewsGJDrassE (2016) From ‘The pump’ to ‘senescence’. In: FentonNEBaxterJ (eds) Practicing Qualitative Methods in Health Geographies. London: Routledge.
10.
AndrewsGJShawD (2010) ‘So we started talking about a beach in Barbados’: Visualization practices and needle phobia. Social Science and Medicine71: 1804–1810.
11.
AndrewsGJSudwellMISparkesAC (2005) Towards a geography of fitness: An ethnographic case study of the gym in British bodybuilding culture. Social Science & Medicine60(4): 877–891.
12.
AndrewsGJEvansJMcAlisterS (2013) ‘Creating the right therapy vibe’: Relational performances in holistic medicine. Social Science & Medicine83: 99–109.
13.
AndrewsGJChenSMyersS (2014a) The ‘taking place’ of health and wellbeing: Towards non-representational theory. Social Science & Medicine108: 210–222.
14.
AndrewsGJKingsburyPKearnsRA (eds) (2014b) Soundscapes of Wellbeing in Popular Music. Aldershot: Ashgate.
15.
AngusJKontosPDyckIMcKeeverPPolandB (2005) The personal significance of home: Habitus and the experience of receiving long-term home care. Sociology of Health & Illness27(2): 161–187.
16.
AtkinsonSHuntR (2019) GeoHumanities and Health. London: Springer.
17.
AtkinsonSRubidgeT (2013) Managing the spatialities of arts-based practices with school children: An inter-disciplinary exploration of engagement, movement and well-being. Arts & Health5(1): 39–50.
18.
BarnfieldA (2016a) Public health, physical exercise and non-representational theory: A mixed method study of recreational running in Sofia, Bulgaria. Critical Public Health26(3): 281–293.
19.
BarnfieldA (2016b) Grasping physical exercise through recreational running and non-representational theory: A case study from Sofia, Bulgaria. Sociology of Health & Illness38(7): 1121–1136.
20.
BellSL (2019) Experiencing nature with sight impairment: Seeking freedom from ableism. Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space2(2): 304–322.
21.
BellSLLeyshonCPhoenixC (2019) Negotiating nature’s weather worlds in the context of life with sight impairment. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers44(2): 270–283.
22.
BellSLPhoenixCLovellRWheelerBW (2015) Using GPS and geo-narratives: A methodological approach for understanding and situating everyday green space encounters. Area47(1): 88–96.
23.
BissellD (2009) Obdurate pains, transient intensities: Affect and the chronically pained body. Environment and Planning. A41(4): 911–928.
BøhlingF (2014) Crowded contexts: On the affective dynamics of alcohol and other drug use in nightlife spaces. Contemporary Drug Problems41(3): 361–392.
26.
BoydCP (2017) Non-Representational Geographies of Therapeutic Art Making: Thinking through Practice. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
27.
BoyerK (2012) Affect, corporeality and the limits of belonging: Breastfeeding in public in the contemporary UK. Health & Place18(3): 552–560.
28.
BoyleLE (2019) The (un) habitual geographies of Social Anxiety Disorder. Social Science & Medicine231: 31–37.
29.
BrownKM (2017) The haptic pleasures of ground-feel: The role of textured terrain in motivating regular exercise. Health & Place46: 307–314.
30.
CoenSERosenbergMWDavidsonJ (2018) ‘It’s gym, like gym not Jim’: Exploring the role of place in the gendering of physical activity. Social Science & Medicine196: 29–36.
31.
CollsR (2007) Materialising bodily matter: Intra-action and the embodiment of ‘fat’. Geoforum38(2): 353–365.
32.
ConradsonD (2007) The experiential economy of stillness: Places of retreat in contemporary Britain. In: WilliamsA (ed.) Therapeutic Landscapes. Aldershot: Ashgate, 33–47.
33.
ConradsonD (2011) The orchestration of feeling: Stillness, spirituality and places of retreat. In: BissellDFullerG (eds) Stillness in a Mobile World. London: Routledge.
34.
CookMEdensorT (2017) Cycling through dark space: Apprehending landscape otherwise. Mobilities12(1): 1–19.
35.
CookSShawJSimpsonP (2016) Jography: Exploring meanings, experiences and spatialities of recreational road-running. Mobilities11(5): 744–769.
36.
CrooksVA (2007) Exploring the altered daily geographies and lifeworlds of women living with fibromyalgia syndrome: A mixed-method approach. Social Science & Medicine, 64(3): 577–588.
37.
DawneyL (2013) The interruption: Investigating subjectivation and affect. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space31(4): 628–644.
38.
DeanJ (2016) Walking in their shoes: Utilizing go-along interviews to explore participant engagement with local space. In: FentonNEBaxterJ (eds) Practicing Qualitative Methods in Health Geographies. London: Routledge.
39.
DeleuzeG (1988) Spinoza: Practical Philosophy. San Francisco: City Lights Books.
40.
DeleuzeGGuattariF (1988) A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia. Bloomsbury Publishing.
41.
DuceyA (2007) More than a job: Meaning, affect, and training health care workers. In: CloughPHalleyJ (eds) The Affective Turn: Theorizing the Social. Durham: Duke University Press, 187–208.
42.
DuffC (2014) Assemblages of Health: Deleuze’s Empiricism and the Ethology of Life. Amsterdam: Springer.
43.
DuffC (2016) Atmospheres of recovery: Assemblages of health. Environment and Planning A48(1): 58–74
44.
DuffCMooreD (2015) Going out, getting about: Atmospheres of mobility in Melbourne’s night-time economy. Social & Cultural Geography16(3): 299–314.
45.
EvansJDCrooksVAKingsburyPT (2009) Theoretical injections: On the therapeutic aesthetics of medical spaces. Social Science & Medicine69(5): 716–721.
46.
FoleyR (2015) Swimming in Ireland: Immersions in therapeutic blue space. Health & Place35(5): 218–225.
47.
GormanR (2019) Thinking critically about health and human-animal relations: Therapeutic affect within spaces of care farming. Social Science & Medicine231: 6–12.
48.
GreenhoughBRoeE (2019) Attuning to laboratory animals and telling stories: Learning animal geography research skills from animal technologists. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space37(2): 367–384.
49.
HallEWiltonR (2017) Towards a relational geography of disability. Progress in Human Geography41(6): 727–744.
50.
HarrisonP (2008) Corporeal remains: Vulnerability, proximity, and living on after the end of the world. Environment and Planning A40: 423–445.
51.
HarrisonP (2009) In the absence of practice. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space27: 987–1009.
52.
HarrisonP (2015) After affirmation, or, being a loser: On vitalism, sacrifice and cinders. GeoHumanities1: 285–306.
53.
IrelandAVFinnegan-JohnJHubbardGScanlonKKyleRG (2019) Walking groups for women with breast cancer: Mobilising therapeutic assemblages of walk, talk and place. Social Science & Medicine231: 38–46.
54.
JayneMValentineGHollowaySL (2010) Emotional, embodied and affective geographies of alcohol, drinking and drunkenness. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers35(4): 540–554.
55.
JohnstonL (1996) Flexing femininity: Female body-builders refiguring ‘the body’. Gender, Place and Culture: A Journal of Feminist Geography3(3): 327–340.
56.
JustesenLGyimóthySMikkelsenBE (2014) Moments of hospitality: Rethinking hospital meals through a non-representational approach. Hospitality & Society4(3): 231–248.
57.
KearnsRA (2014) The health in ‘life’s infinite doings’: A response to Andrews et al. Social Science & Medicine115: 147–149.
58.
KraftlPHortonJ (2007) ‘The health event’: Everyday, affective politics of participation. Geoforum38(5): 1012–1027.
59.
LeaJCadmanLPhiloC (2015) Changing the habits of a lifetime? Mindfulness meditation and habitual geographies. Cultural Geographies22(1): 49–65.
LorimerH (2005) Cultural geography: The busyness of being more-than-representational. Progress in Human Geography29(1): 83–94.
62.
LorimerH (2012) Surfaces and slopes. Performance Research17: 83–86.
63.
LuginaahI (2008) Local gin (akpeteshie) and HIV/AIDS in the Upper West Region of Ghana: The need for preventive health policy. Health & Place14(4): 806–816.
64.
MacPhersonH (2008) I don't know why they call it the lake district, they might as well call it the rock district: The workings of humour and laughter in research with members of visually impaired walking groups. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space26(6): 1080–1095.
65.
McCormackDP (2013) Refrains for Moving Bodies: Experience and Experiment in Affective Spaces. Durham: Duke University Press.
66.
MeijeringLTheunissenNLettingaAT (2019) Re-engaging with places: Understanding bio-geo-graphical disruption and flow in adult brain injury survivors. Social Science & Medicine231: 22–30.
67.
MiddletonJ (2009) ‘Stepping in time’: Walking, time and space in the city. Environment and PlanningA 41: 1943–1961.
68.
MiddletonJ (2010) Sense and the city: Exploring the embodied geographies of urban walking. Social and Cultural Geography11: 575–596.
69.
PatersonM (2005) Affecting touch: Towards a felt phenomenology of therapeutic touch. In: DavidsonJBondiLSmithM (eds) Emotional Geographies. Aldershot: Ashgate, 161–173.
70.
PhiloC (2017) Less-than-human geographies. Political Geography60: 256–258.
71.
PhoenixCBellSL (2019) Beyond ‘move more’: Feeling the rhythms of physical activity in mid and later-life. Social Science & Medicine231: 47–54.
72.
PittH (2014) Therapeutic experiences of community gardens: Putting flow in its place. Health & Place27: 84–91.
73.
PredR (2005) Onflow: Dynamics of Consciousness and Experience. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
74.
RavnSDuffC (2015) Putting the party down on paper: A novel method for mapping youth drug use in private settings. Health & Place31: 124–132.
75.
RichmondC (2016) Applying decolonizing methodologies in environment-health research: A community-based film project with Anishinabe communities. In: FentonNEBaxterJ (eds) Practicing Qualitative Methods in Health Geographies. London: Routledge.
76.
RoeEGreenhoughB (2014) Experimental partnering: Interpreting improvisatory habits in the research field. International Journal of Social Research Methodology17(1): 45–57.
77.
SegrottJDoelMA (2004) Disturbing geography: Obsessive-compulsive disorder as spatial practice. Social & Cultural Geography5(4): 597–614.
78.
SimpsonP (2017) A sense of the cycling environment: Felt experiences of infrastructure and atmospheres. Environment and Planning A49(2): 426–447.
79.
SkinnerEMasudaJR (2014) Mapping the geography of health inequity through participatory hip hop. In: AndrewsGKingsburyPKearnsR (eds) Soundscapes of Wellbeing in Popular Music. London: Routledge.
80.
SolomonH (2011) Affective journeys: The emotional structuring of medical tourism in India. Anthropology and Medicine18(1): 105–118.
81.
SpinneyJ (2015) Close encounters? Mobile methods, (post) phenomenology and affect. Cultural Geographies22(2): 231–246.
82.
StephensLRuddickSMcKeeverP (2015) Disability and Deleuze: An exploration of becoming and embodiment in children’s everyday environments. Body & Society21(2): 194–220
83.
TanQH (2012) Towards an affective smoking geography. Geography Compass6(9): 533–545.
84.
TanQH (2013) Smoking spaces as enabling spaces of wellbeing. Health & Place24: 173–182.
ThriftNHarrisonBAndersonB (2010) ‘The 27th letter’: An interview with Nigel Thrift. In: Anderson B and Harrison P (eds) Taking-Place: Non-Representational Theories and Human Geography. Aldershot: Ashgate, 183–198.
87.
VanniniP (2009) Nonrepresentational theory and symbolic interactionism: Shared perspectives and missed articulations. Symbolic Interaction32(3): 282–286.
88.
WhiteheadMLilleyRHowellRJonesRPykettJ (2016) (Re)inhabiting awareness: Geography and mindfulness. Social & Cultural Geography17(4): 553–573.
89.
WylieJ (2005) A single day’s walking: Narrating self and landscape on the South West Coast Path. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers30(2): 234–247.