The mobility and performativity turns in social sciences offer valuable perspectives to assess affective and sensuous aspects in the consumption of spaces, which draw attention to the embodied (Jensen et al. 2017), haptic (Waade Jansson’s texturation, 2007), to explore how the co-located micro-performances and affective intensities of pedestrians take place and shape public space, and as such, reveal sensuous spatial imaginaries “in the making”.
Szilvia Gyimothy Mørup-Petersen (Sat,) studied this question.