Connections. Arts and Humanities for Just Mobility Futures | Book

Connections. Arts and Humanities for Just Mobility Futures is an open-access publication in three languages (English, Italian, and Korean) authored by Peter Adey, Jinhyoung Lee, Peter Merriman, Lynne Pearce, Veronica della Dora, Sasha Engelmann, Simone Gigliotti, Harriet Hawkins, Jooyoung Kim, Taehee Kim, Giada Peterle and Tania Rossetto. The book emerged as a joint reflection based on years of networking activities carried out among various partners in the UK (Lancaster University Centre for Mobilities ResearchRoyal Holloway University of London Centre for the GeoHumanitiesAberystwyth University Centre for Transport and Mobility) and South Korea (Konkuk University Academy of Mobility Humanities).

 

The book is a product of both UK and South Korean research grants. The UK grant was funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) and Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) through a UKRI UK-South Korea Social Science and Humanities Connections Grant, part of UKRI’s Fund for International Cooperation (FIC). This project was titled “Connecting Mobilities Research between the UK and South Korea: narrating, mobilising, experimenting and engaging mobilities for just futures” (reference: ES/W010895/1), and involved investigators based in the Royal Holloway University of London and Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Aberystwyth University, Lancaster University, and Konkuk University. The team also received funding from KNRF’s Humanities Korea + (HK+) programme (reference: NRF-2018S1A6A3A03043497), in conjunction with a Korean research grant “Mobility Humanities based on the Coevolution of Human being and Technologies”. The Italian translation was funded by the UK grant and carried out by Giuseppe Tomasella for the MoHu Centre.

 

The Centre for Advanced Studies in Mobility and the Humanities (MoHu) has emerged as a travel companion on this journey, creating further connections and triangulations that have enriched and added nuances to the mobility and humanities binomial. Director Tania Rossetto particularly wishes to thank all her colleagues at the Centre, as well as the past director, Andrea Caracausi, for their collegial work in organising and animating events, conferences, seminars, publications, and meetings with colleagues from Royal Holloway, Aberystwyth, Lancaster, and Konkuk. In particular, thanks to the MoHu’s support, it was possible for the Paduan delegation – including Giada Peterle, Margherita Cisani, Laura Lo Presti, Chiara Rabbiosi, Paola Molino, Marco Bertilorenzi, Lucio Biasiori and Federico Mazzini – to meet colleagues at several venues in Italy, the UK and Seoul.

 

From the Introduction:

“This book is interested in connection and connecting our  approaches and ideas of mobility. It is interested in these issues, however, in quite a specific way. On one hand, it seeks to make sense of connections between old and emerging concepts and approaches towards mobility that are more sensitive and open to the ethos, methods and practices of research from the arts and humanities. […] On the other hand, the book acknowledges the imperative to direct these new and emerging encounters and connections between mobilities and the arts and humanities towards more equitable, just and sustainable mobility futures, even as it pushes against the constraints and challenges of a neoliberal academy. For mobility arts and humanities cannot operate in a vacuum but simultaneously realises the constitutive role of mobility in the pressing social, political, economic and environment crises of our time, now, and in the future, and what has come before”

  

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