91ÇÑ×Ó

Join us
Orange welcome sign that reads Royal Geographical Society with IBG.

Become a member and discover where geography can take you.

Join us

Wiley Research Fellowships: Bradley Rink

As part of our mission to undertake research on the Society’s Collections and to make them more accessible, we awarded 10 Wiley Research Fellowships for 2020-21.ÌýWe spoke to each of our Research Fellows to find out more about their projects.

Dr Bradley Rink from the University of the Western Cape, South Africa.ÌýBradley examined growing tourism and worldliness through aeromobility in Africa. We caught up with him to discuss his research, why he applied for the Fellowship and what he’s hoping to find in the digital archives.

Ìý

How did you come to be interested in your current research?

I am a human geographer who is interested in the role of mobilities - and specifically aeromobilities - as they relate to African cities. My previous research on practices of flying within (and over) Cape Town brought me to an archival method that underscored the importance of commercial aviation on the development and growth of ‘airmindedness’, worldliness and tourism in Southern Africa. My earlier work elaborated on questions of the aeromobile gaze, building upon John Urry’s seminal work. Yet, I wanted to explore the notion of ‘airmindedness’ both as an ‘awareness of above’ as well as ‘below’ from an aerial perspective.

What made you apply for a WDA Research Fellowship?

I became familiar with the Wiley Digital Archives (WDA) through my participation in the combined 2020 RAI/91ÇÑ×Ó Conference Anthropology and Geography: Dialogues Past, Present and Future. I participated in the ‘Digital Archives Slam’ where I presented an initial dive into the WDA and what it could offer with regard to my interest in African airmindedness. My current WDA Research Fellowship study builds upon this work. My initial explorations of the WDA revealed an intriguing sample of mundane archival material, yet I was keen to pursue an opportunity to engage with and explore the WDA - and the Society’s Collections particularly - to more fully trace the arc of airmindedness that emerges from the historical record. Using the WDA has allowed me to perform archival research at a time when no one is flying anywhere - myself included.

How does your project sit within your wider research interests?

The project aligns very well with my broader research project at the University of the Western Cape, entitled Mobilities in the global South. Through that project I seek to investigate the critical importance of movement and stasis both in localised and translocal contexts of cities in the global South. My research across a range of mobility practices and subjectivities attempts to question boundaries, rootedness and territory in the context of African cities.

What are you hoping to find in the digital archives?

My hope is to encounter mundane traces of airmindedness in the marginalia of the archival material that relates to air travel in Africa. My research using the WDA thus far has uncovered hidden stories buried in the margins, including material from airline magazines, airline route guides, and mundane paperwork from passengers’ travels. While the starting point for this project has been the William Buller Fagg Collection (RAI Collection no: FP 046), my present research has made use of Society Collections including the library manuscripts collection which includes, inter alia, Lord Nathan’s 1956 address entitled World Aviation and Geography delivered to the Geographical Association, and various photographic collections demonstrating shifts in aircraft technology from RGS Images Online and Loose Images collections. Together these materials - which might otherwise be easily overlooked - help to highlight a new wave of airmindedness established across Africa in the decades between the 1930s and 1960s.Ìý

Find out more aboutÌýresearch on our Collections.

The findings from our Wiley Research Fellows from this year will be shared in the autumn.

Ìý