Books

Coleman, R., Jungnickel, K and Puwar, N. 2024. (eds) How to do Social Research with….. Goldsmiths Press.

Lammes, S., Jungnickel, K., Hjorth, L. and Rae, J. 2023. (eds) Failurists: when things go awry, Institute of Network Cultures.

Jungnickel, K. (ed). 2020. Transmissions: Critical tactics for making and communicating research, MIT Press

Hjorth, L., Harris, A,  Jungnickel, K and Coombs, G. 2020. Creative Practice Ethnographies, Lexington Press.

Jungnickel, K. 2018. Bikes & Bloomers: Victorian women inventors and their extraordinary cycle wear, Goldsmiths Press/ MIT Press (paperback out April 2020)

Jungnickel, K. 2014. DIY WIFI: Re-imagining connectivity, Palgrave Macmillan Pivot

Journal articles

Jungnickel, K. 2023. Convertible, Multiple and Hidden: The inventive lives of women’s sport and activewear 1890-1940, Sociological Review, First online 1st Feb, https://doi.org/10.1177/00380261231153754

Jungnickel, K and May, K. 2023. From 100 year old women’s motoring masks to contemporary PPE: A socio-political study of persistent problems and inventive possibilities. Sociology, Online first, 1st Feb, https://doi.org/10.1177/00380385221143654

Jungnickel, K. 2022. Speculative Sewing: Researching, reconstructing and re-imagining clothing as technoscience. Social Studies of Science, Online first 16 August, https://doi.org/10.1177/030631272211192

Jungnickel, K. 2021. Clothing inventions as acts of citizenship? The politics of material participation, wearable technologies and women patentees in late Victorian Britain. Science Technology & Human Values, Online Sept 14.

Jungnickel, K. 2021. Speculatively sewing historic clothing patents. Interactions Magazine, 28(4): 15-17.

Jungnickel, K. 2021. Politics of Patents: Researching, making and wearing alternative histories of clothing inventions, Special Issue: Alternative Histories in DIY Cultures and Maker Utopias, Digital Culture and Society.

Jungnickel, K. 2015. “One needs to every brave to stand all that”: Cycling, rational dress and the struggle for citizenship in late nineteenth century Britain, Geoforum, Special Issue: Geographies of citizenship and everyday (im)mobility.

Forlano, L & Jungnickel, K. 2014. Hacking Binaries/ Hacking Hybrids: Understanding the Black/White Binary as a Socio-Technical Practice, ADA: A Journal of Gender, New Media and Technology, Issue 6

Jungnickel, K and Hjorth, L. 2014. Methodological entanglements in the field: methods, transitions and transmissionsVisual Studies, Special Issue: Transformations in art and ethnography, 29 (2): 138-147.

Aldred, R & Jungnickel, K. 2014. Why culture matters for transport policy: the case of cycling in the UK, Journal of Transport Geography, 34: 78-87.

Aldred, R & Jungnickel, K. 2013. Matter in or out of place: Bicycle parking strategies and their effects on people, practices and places, Social and Cultural Geography, 14(6): 604-624.

Jungnickel, K. 2013. Getting There …and Back: How ethnographic commuting (by bicycle) shaped a study of Australian backyard technologistsQualitative Research, 14(6): 640-655

Jungnickel, K & Aldred, R. 2013. Sensory Strategies: How cyclists mediate their exposure to the urban environmentMobilities, 9(2): 238-255.

Aldred, R & Jungnickel, K. 2012. Constructing mobile spaces between ‘leisure’ and ‘transport’: A case study of two group cycle ridesSociology, 46(3): 523-539.

Jungnickel, K. 2010. Exhibiting Ethnographic Knowledge: Making sociology about makers of technology. Street Signs, Centre for Urban and Community Research, London: Goldsmiths, 28-31. [PDF]

Jungnickel, K. 2004. Sensing the City and Other Stories. Snapshot, London: Proboscis. Available here.

Book chapters

 Bonham, J and Jungnickel, K. 2022. Cycling & Gender: Past, present and paths ahead, In G. Norcliff et al. (ed) Routledge Companion to Cycling, Routledge

Jungnickel, K. 2020. “Doing Critical Creative Practice and Social Research”, Section 10: Critical Making and Future Directions, In Hjorth, de Souza, A and Lanson, K. The Routledge Companion to Mobile Media Art, London and New York: Routledge

Spinney, J and Jungnickel, K. 2019. Studying Mobilities, Series: Mobilities, Space and Place. In Atkinson, P., Delamont, S., Cernat, A., Sakshaug, J.W., and Williams, R.A. (eds) Sage Research Methods Foundations, London & New York: Sage Publications

Jungnickel, K. 2018. Making Things To Make Sense of Things: DiY as research subject and practice, In Sayers, J. (ed) The Routledge Companion to Media Studies and Digital Humanities

Jungnickel, K. 2017. Socio-Technical Mobile Devices of Resistance: Victorian inventors, women cyclists and convertible cycle wear patents, In Caygill, H., Leeker, M and Schulze, T. (eds) Inventions in Digital Cultures: Action, Resistance, Critique, Digital Cultures Research Lab, Leüphana University, Germany

Jungnickel, K. 2016. “Ournet not the internet”: an ethnography of homebrew high-tech practices in suburban Australia, In Hjorth, L, Horst, H., Galloway, A and Bell, G. (eds) The Routledge Companion to Digital Ethnography

Jungnickel, K. 2014. Jumps, stutters and other failed images: using time-lapse video in cycling research, In Bates, C. (ed) Video Methods, Routledge, Advances in Research Methods series. Chapter 6, pp.132-152

Jungnickel, K. 2012. View from the saddle and the lens: Experiencing, examining and representing cycling cultures. Off Tour,-ECAL University of Art and Design, Lausanne, Switzerland.

Jungnickel, K and Bell, G 2008.  Home is where the hub is? Domestic culture and wireless infrastructure in Australian homes. In Handbook of Research on Urban Informatics: Community Integration, Implementation, edited by M, Foth, M. Hershey, PA: IGI Global.

Wakeford, N., Orton-Johnson, K and Jungnickel, K. 2006. Using the Internet. In From Postgraduate to Social Scientist: A Guide to Key Skills, edited by N, Gilbert. London: Sage.

Websites

Bikes and Bloomers – www.bikesandbloomers.com
Politics of Patents – www.politicsofpatents.org
Methods Lab – www.methodslab.org
Transmissions – www.transmissionsandentanglements.com
Cycling Cultures – www.cyclingcultures.org.uk [no longer online]
73 Urban Journeys – www.73urbanjourneys.com
Wireless Cultures – www.studioincite.com/makingwifi
Domestic Spaces and Interfaces for Located Mobility – www.studioincite.com/locatedmobility

Other writing, catalogues, zines, book covers

2021. Speculatively Sewing Historic Clothing Patents. IX Interactions Magazine, Making & Breaking, July – PDF available here.
2018. 19th Century Cycling, History Now, News. BBC History Mag, June.
2018. The Ingenious cycle wear Victorian women invented to navigate social mores, The Guardian, Bike Blog, 16 April
2015. Making Things Up: Design perspectives from a study of Victorian women’s convertible cycle wear, IX Interactions Magazine
2014. Anthropology + Design, Savage Minds: Notes and queries in Anthropology, 14 March
2012. Experiments in (and out of) the studio: Art and design methods for Science and Technology Studies, Zine, pdf and print, funded by Microsoft Research Cambridge and Goldsmiths, University of London
2011. My Beautiful Bike. Boneshaker Magazine, Issue 7, http://www.boneshakermag.com/
2011. Cycling Culture interim findings – Hull, Hackney, Bristol and Cambridge. Zines, pdf and print, University of East London.
2007. Cover photos for Goggin, G & M, Gregg. (eds) Wireless Cultures & Technologies, Media International Australia, (MIA): University of Qld.
2002. (with G. Lane) (eds) Mapping Perception, Exhibition Catalogue. London: Proboscis.