This small book shares a method I designed during my PhD — a method I call flâneuserie. It’s a way of wandering, noticing, and designing that helped me make sense of big, messy questions. It’s part of a wider practice research approach — not to fix or perfect, but to explore, to think through making, to hold things open.
I wrote this for those who feel their work doesn't quite fit tidy boxes. For designers who care about bodies, public space, reproductive justice — and who know that curiosity is a method too. This book doesn’t tell you what I found. It shares how I found it. It’s methodological, yes — but also political, creative, and deeply situated.
Flâneuserie isn’t a tool, it’s a practice. A feminist one. An angry one. A hopeful one.
Come walk with me.
Listen up.
Here’s an audio version of Flâneuserie: Walking in Context. I’ve included it because research should be accessible — not everyone reads in the same way, and sometimes hearing something changes how it lands.
This isn’t a slick voiceover. It’s me, reading my work aloud, the way I wrote it — pauses, emphasis, feeling. It brings a different kind of intimacy. A way of sharing the method that holds space for different kinds of knowing, and different kinds of bodies.
Plug in, slow down, and come walk with me.