Adrian Franklin

Prof Adrian Franklin

School of Communication, Media and Journalism

College of Creative Arts, Design and Humanities

Eligible to supervise Masters and PhD - email supervisor to discuss availability.

Available For Media Comment.


With a background in social anthropology, cultural studies and sociology, my research effort is directed to a range of pressing contemporary questions.  How can we extend the role, and benefits of art to more people and more places in contemporary life? How can we grow creative expression?  How can we put the festive back in festivals?
How can we create the kind of cities we want and need rather than those produced merely by unplanned, unthinking development? How can we create the kinds of lives we want to live, and build a sense of belonging for all rather than accept the socially isolated, precarious and lonely worlds of contemporary individualism?  
And how can we live better lives with our non-human allies and neighbours?  We are only just beginning to understand the creative potential of new kinds of relationships with non-human kin, and it is as exciting as it is urgent and health promoting.
 My research seeks to identify, document and understand the nature of these problems as well as work with partners to seek and evaluate new strategies.  My research is characterised by a keen interest in the application of contemporary theory, especially using forms of ‘the new materialism’, embodied perspectives, contemporary ritual, mobilities and posthumanism.  I recently edited the Routledge International Handbook of More-than-Human Studies (2024). From social anthropology, I use very intensive methods involving participant observation, biographical interviewing and immersive fieldwork combined with archival, data base and survey research, that derives from my sociology background. 
 In recent years, my research has looked intensively at a range of museums and cities around the world that have attempted to break free from the limitations of conventional models. 
 I am opening up a new field of research on art tourism.  Hitherto buried under the overcrowded category of ‘cultural tourism’, this increasingly significant flow of travellers (which includes a significant number of art world creatives) drives cultural exchange, creativity and innovation on a global scale. We know very little about it, yet few cities are not trying to attract it.
 I have begun to develop new work on festivals and markets through a study of the relatively few that are super successful and those that survived the purges of traditional festivals and street markets in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
 I have pioneered new theoretical and research work on loneliness and belonging across the life course, its connections to different kinds of cities and space and its connections with gender cultures, the public sphere, place, housing, domestic relations, companion animals, new technologies and health.  With Bruce Tranter I recently embarked on a new study of the relationship between loneliness and belonging in Australia and in particular how forms of belonging derive from arts and culture, generation, time, place and other more-than-human sources.
Career achievments
    • Authored 110 peer reviewed books, journal articles and book chapters. These include 18 research books, 1 edited book, 47 journal articles and 46 book chapters.  
   • Named on Stanford’s World Top 2% Researchers rankings, 2024
   • Appointed to the ARC College of Experts 2023-2026
   • Research cited 10,137 times (Google Scholar); H-index 42.
   • Delivered 48 invited keynote presentations and 34 public lectures since 2009,
   • Awarded $4.2 million in competitive research funding across career.
   • Commissioned to deliver the Sir William Dobell Annual Art Lecture 2020, School of Art and Design, Australian National University.
   •  Elected Member of the Association of Social Anthropologists of the Commonwealth, UK. (Elected 1990).     
   • Appointed to Australian Research Council’s College of Experts Selection Advisory Committee (SAC) for the 2020 Special Research Initiative – Australian Society, History and Culture.
    • Anti-museum  (2020), included in Charles Saumarez Smith’s [Former CEO of Royal Academy] best 5 art museum books in the  world.    
    • Appointed to the Australian Research Council’s Engagement and Impact Panel, Creative Arts and Humanities, 2018
    • Contributed ‘Mona and the political-cultural economy of independent galleries’ to book awarded the Prize for Best Arts Anthology of the Year (2021): The Australian Art Field: Practices, Policies, Institutions. 
     • The Making of Mona (2014) has sold 21,145 copies (as of 7 April 2025)

 

Year Citation
2023 Franklin, A. (2023). Carnival relocated? Popular culture and the Carnivalesque in Colonial Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania). Cultural and Social History, 20(5), 661-683.
DOI Scopus1 WoS3
2022 Franklin, A., Lee, B., & Rentschler, R. (2022). The Adelaide Festival and the development of arts in Adelaide. Journal of Urban Affairs, 44(4-5), 588-613.
DOI Scopus8 WoS4
2022 Franklin, A., & Tranter, B. (2022). Places of belonging, loneliness and lockdown. Thesis Eleven, 172(1), 150-165.
DOI Scopus3 WoS2
2021 Franklin, A., & Tranter, B. (2021). Loneliness and the cultural, spatial, temporal and generational bases of belonging. Australian Journal of Psychology, 73(1), 1-13.
DOI Scopus22 WoS22
2021 Duffy, M., Scarles, C., Edensor, T., Waitt, G., & Franklin, A. (2021). Twenty years on: reflections on the journeys travelled and future directions for tourist studies. Tourist Studies, 21(1), 3-8.
DOI Scopus5 WoS3
2019 Franklin, A. (2019). Where 'art meets life': assessing the impact of Dark Mofo, a new midwinter festival in Australia. Journal of festive studies, 1(1, Spring), 106-127.
DOI
2019 Franklin, A., Neves, B. B., Hookway, N., Patulny, R., Tranter, B., & Jaworski, K. (2019). Towards an understanding of loneliness among Australian men: gender cultures, embodied expression and the social bases of belonging. Journal of sociology, 55(1), 124-143.
DOI Scopus63 WoS61
2018 Franklin, A., & Sansom, M. (2018). 'Aimless and absurd wanderings'? Children at the Museum of Old and New Art (Mona). Museum & society, 16(1), 28-40.
DOI
2018 Franklin, A. (2018). Art tourism: a new field for tourist studies. Tourist studies, 18(4), 399-416.
DOI Scopus52 WoS39
2017 Franklin, A., & Papastergiadis, N. (2017). Engaging with the anti-museum? Visitors to the Museum of Old and New Art. Journal of Sociology, 53(3), 670-686.
DOI Scopus30
2017 Franklin, A. (2017). The more-than-human city. Sociological review, 65(2), 202-217.
DOI Scopus76
2017 Booth, K., O'Connor, J., Franklin, A., & Papastergiadis, N. (2017). It's a museum, but not as we know it: issues for local residents accessing the museum of old and new art. Visitor studies, 20(1), 10-32.
DOI Scopus16
2016 Franklin, A. (2016). Journeys to the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao: towards a revised Bilbao Effect. Annals of tourism research, 59, 79-92.
DOI Scopus57
2015 Franklin, A. (2015). Miffy and me: developing an auto-ethnographic approach to the study of companion animals and human loneliness. Animal studies journal, 4(2), 78-115.
2014 Franklin, A. (2014). On why we dig the beach: tracing the subjects and objects of the bucket and spade for a relational materialist theory of the beach. Tourist studies, 14(3), 261-285.
DOI Scopus27 WoS24
2013 Franklin, A., Picken, F., & Osbaldiston, N. (2013). The changing nature of the beach for low carbon societies: the Australian case. International journal of climate change: impacts and responses, 4(3), 1-10.
DOI
2012 Franklin, A. (2012). A lonely society? Loneliness and liquid modernity in Australia. Australian journal of social issues, 47(1), 11-28.
DOI Scopus22
2011 Galliford, M. (2011). Touring 'country', sharing 'home': Aboriginal tourism, Australian tourists and the possibilities for cultural transversality. Tourist Studies: an international journal, 10(3), 227-244.
DOI Scopus25
2011 Franklin, A., & Tranter, B. (2011). AHURI essay: housing, loneliness and health. AHURI final report, (164), 1-30.
Scopus4
2011 Franklin, A. S. (2011). Performing acclimatisation: the agency of trout fishing in postcolonial Australia. Ethnos, 76(1), 19-40.
DOI Scopus11
2010 West, B. D. (2010). Dialogical memorialization, international travel and the public sphere : a cultural sociology of commemoration and tourism at the First World War Gallipoli battlefields. Tourist studies : an international journal, 10(3), 209-225.
DOI Scopus35
2010 Franklin, A. (2010). Aboriginalia: souvenir wares and the 'Aboriginalization' of Australian identity. Tourist studies, 10(3), 195-208.
DOI Scopus11
2010 Franklin, A., & Picken, F. (2010). Tourism, Design and Controversy: Calling on Non-humans to Explain Ourselves. Tourist Studies, 10(3), 245-263.
DOI Scopus23
2010 Franklin, A., Lewis, C., Kerr, G., & Pomering, A. (2010). Self-identity and Social Norms in Destination Choice by Young Australian Travellers. Tourist Studies, 10(3), 265-283.
DOI Scopus14
2009 Franklin, A. S. (2009). On loneliness. Geografiska Annaler, Series B: Human Geography, 91(4), 343-354.
DOI Scopus43
2008 Franklin, A. (2008). The tourism ordering: taking tourism more seriously as a globalising ordering. Civilisations: Revue International d’Anthropologie et de Sciences Humaine, 57, 25-39.
2008 Franklin, A. (2008). Chapter 12 Ethnography and housing studies revisited. Studies in Qualitative Methodology, 10, 271-289.
DOI Scopus5
2007 Franklin, A. (2007). Human-nonhuman animal relationships in Australia: An overview of results from the first national survey and follow-up case studies 2000-2004. Society and Animals, 15(1), 7-27.
DOI Scopus50
2006 Franklin, A. (2006). "Be[a]ware of the dog": A Post-humanist approach to housing. Housing Theory and Society, 23(3), 137-156.
DOI Scopus81
2006 Franklin, A. (2006). Burning cities: A posthumanist account of Australians and eucalypts. Environment and Planning D Society and Space, 24(4), 555-576.
DOI Scopus47
2004 Franklin, A. (2004). Tourism as an ordering: Towards a new ontology of tourism. Tourist Studies, 4(3), 277-301.
DOI Scopus231
2001 Franklin, A., & White, R. (2001). Animals and modernity: Changing human–animal relations, 1949–98. Journal of Sociology, 37(3), 219-238.
DOI Scopus53
2001 Franklin, A., Tranter, B., & White, R. (2001). Explaining Support for Animal Rights: A Comparison of Two Recent Approaches to Humans, Nonhuman Animals, and Postmodernity. Society and Animals, 9(2), 127-144.
DOI Scopus15
2001 Franklin, A., & Crang, M. (2001). The trouble with tourism and travel theory?. Tourist Studies, 1(1), 5-22.
DOI Scopus712
2001 Franklin, A. (2001). Performing live: An interview with Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett. Tourist Studies, 1(3), 211-232.
DOI Scopus18
2001 Franklin, A. (2001). Neo-Darwinian Leisures, the Body and Nature: Hunting and Angling in Modernity. Body Society, 7(4), 57-76.
DOI Scopus57
2001 Franklin, A. (2001). The Tourist Gaze and beyond: An interview with John Urry. Tourist Studies, 1(2), 115-131.
DOI Scopus32
1998 Franklin, A. (1998). Naturalizing sports: Hunting and angling in modern environments. International Review for the Sociology of Sport, 33(4), 355-366.
DOI Scopus22
1996 Franklin, A. (1996). Australian hunting and angling sports and the changing nature of human-animal relations in Australia. Journal of Sociology, 32(3), 39-56.
DOI Scopus30
1996 Franklin, A. (1996). On fox-hunting and angling: Norbert Elias and the 'sportisation' process. Journal of Historical Sociology, 9(4), 432-456.
DOI Scopus21
1990 Franklin, A. (1990). Ethnography and Housing Studies. Housing Studies, 5(2), 92-111.
DOI Scopus29
1989 Franklin, A. (1989). Working-class privatism: an historical case study of Bedminster, Bristol. Environment Planning D Society Space, 7(1), 93-113.
DOI Scopus25

Year Citation
2024 Franklin, A. (2024). Entangling early: rebuilding passion for natural and cultural terroir for post covid, low-carbon societies'. In F. Waterton (Ed.), Source details - Title: Shores, Surfaces and Depths: Oceanic Cultures of Tourism and Leisure (pp. 71-92). UK: Routledge.
DOI Scopus1
2023 Franklin, A. (2023). The more-than-human city. In Routledge International Handbook of More than Human Studies (pp. 189-202). Routledge.
DOI
2023 Franklin, A. (2023). Walking into the future with Bruno Latour. In A. Franklin (Ed.), Source details - Title: The Routledge International Handbook of More-than-Human Studies (pp. 433-456). UK: Routledge.
DOI Scopus1
2023 Franklin, A. (2023). The separation?. In A. Franklin (Ed.), Source details - Title: The Routledge International Handbook of More-than-Human Studies (pp. 1-28). UK: Routledge.
DOI
2022 Franklin, A. (2022). Loneliness: the decline of cultural and everyday sources of belonging in contemporary societies. In M. H. Jacobsen (Ed.), Source details - Title: Emotions in Culture and Everyday Life: Conceptual, Theoretical and Empirical Explorations (pp. 81-98). UK: Routledge.
DOI Scopus4
2020 Franklin, A. (2020). Mona and the political-cultural economy of independent galleries. In T. Bennett (Ed.), Source details - Title: The Australian Art Field Practices, Policies, Institutions (pp. 31-43). US: Routledge.
DOI Scopus1
2020 Franklin, A. (2020). Urbanizing. In S. Matthewman, B. Curtis, & D. Mayeda (Eds.), Source details - Title: Being Sociological (3 ed., pp. 65-82). UK: Red Globe Press.
2020 Franklin, A. (2020). Glassmaker for a becoming world. In Source details - Title: Tom Moore: abundant wonder (pp. 88-137). Adelaide: Wakefield Press.
2019 Hookway, N., Barbosa Neves, B., Franklin, A., & Patulny, R. (2019). Loneliness and love in late modernity: sites of tension and resistance. In R. Patulny (Ed.), Source details - Title: Emotions in late modernity (pp. 83-97). England: Routledge.
DOI
2018 Franklin, A., & Colas, T. (2018). Feral tourism. In New Moral Natures in Tourism (pp. 131-148).
DOI
2018 Franklin, A., & Colas, T. (2018). Feral tourism. In K. Caton, L. Cooke, & B. Grimwood (Eds.), Source details - Title: New moral natures in tourism (pp. 131-148). US: Routledge.
DOI
2017 Franklin, A. (2017). Far from the madding crowd: big cats on Dartmoor and in Dorset. In S. Hurn (Ed.), Source details - Title: Anthropology and cryptozoology: exploring encounters with mysterious creatures (pp. 186-202). UK: Routledge.
DOI
2016 Franklin, A. (2016). The MONA effect. In A. Hoyne (Ed.), Source details - Title: The place economy (pp. 168-199). Australia: Hoyne.
2015 Franklin, A. (2015). Ecosystem and landscape: strategies for the anthropocene. In H. Collective (Ed.), Source details - Title: Animals in the anthropocene: critical perspectives on non-human futures (pp. 63-88). Australia: Sydney University Press.
2014 Franklin, A. (2014). Tourist studies. In P. Adey (Ed.), Source details - Title: The Routledge Handbook of Mobilities (pp. 74-84). UK: Routledge.
2014 Franklin, A. (2014). The adored and the abhorrent: nationalism and feral cats in England and Australia. In G. Marvin, & S. McHugh (Eds.), Source details - Title: Routledge Handbook of Human-Animal Studies (pp. 139-153). UK: Routledge.
DOI Scopus14
2013 Franklin, A. (2013). Family networks, reciprocity and housing wealth. In R. Forrest, & A. Murie (Eds.), Source details - Title: Housing and Family Wealth: Comparative International Perspectives (pp. 231-260). UK: Routledge.
DOI Scopus4
2013 Franklin, A. (2013). Relating to aquatic insects: becoming English fly fishers. In R. M. Lemelin (Ed.), Source details - Title: The Management of Insects in Recreation and Tourism (pp. 123-137). UK: Cambridge University Press.
DOI
2013 Franklin, A. (2013). Viewing nature politically. In A. Holden, & D. A. Fennell (Eds.), Source details - Title: The Routledge Handbook of Tourism and the Environment (pp. 75-83). UK: Routledge.
Scopus2
2013 Franklin, A. (2013). The ethics of second-hand consumption. In T. Lewis, & E. Potter (Eds.), Source details - Title: Ethical Consumption: A Critical Introduction (pp. 156-168). UK: Routledge.
DOI Scopus13
2013 Franklin, A. (2013). The ethics of second-hand consumption. In Ethical Consumption A Critical Introduction (pp. 156-168).
DOI
2012 Franklin, A. (2012). Burning cities: a posthumanist account of Australians and eucalypts. In S. Elden (Ed.), Source details - Title: Environment and Planning, Volume 4: Society and space (pp. 243-272). UK: Sage.
2012 Franklin, A. (2012). The choreography of a mobile world: tourism orderings. In R. Duim, C. Ren, & G. T. Jóhannesson (Eds.), Source details - Title: Actor-network theory and tourism: ordering, materiality and multiplicity (pp. 43-58). UK: Routledge.
Scopus20
2011 Franklin, A. (2011). Ethnography and housing studies. In D. Hobbs (Ed.), Source details - Title: Ethnography in Context. Volume One: The urban condition (pp. 25-56). UK: Sage.
2011 Franklin, A. (2011). An improper nature? Introduced animals and 'species cleansing' in Australia. In B. Carter, & N. Charles (Eds.), Source details - Title: Human and Other Animals: Critical Perspectives (pp. 195-216). UK: Palgrave Macmillan.
DOI
2011 Franklin, A. (2011). An improper nature? Introduced animals and ‘species cleansing’ in Australia. In B. Carter, & N. Charles (Eds.), Human and Other Animals Critical Perspectives (pp. 195-216). Palgrave Macmillan UK.
DOI Scopus9
2010 Franklin, A. (2010). The tourism syndrome: an interview with Zygmunt Bauman. In M. Sorbello, & A. Weitzel (Eds.), Source details - Title: Transient spaces: the tourist syndrome (Vol. 3, pp. 205-217). Berlin: argobooks.
DOI Scopus117
2009 Franklin, A. (2009). A choreography of fire: a posthumanist account of Australians and eucalypts. In A. Pickering, & K. Guzik (Eds.), Source details - Title: The Mangle in Practice: Science, Society and Becoming (pp. 17-45). US: Duke University Press.
2009 Franklin, A. (2009). Plant geographies. In R. Kitchin, & N. Thrift (Eds.), Source details - Title: International Encyclopedia of Human Geography (pp. 199-203). UK: Elsevier.
DOI
2009 Franklin, A. (2009). The sociology of tourism. In T. Jamal, & M. Robinson (Eds.), Source details - Title: The SAGE Handbook of Tourism Studies (pp. 65-81). UK: Sage.
DOI Scopus32
2009 Franklin, A. (2009). Plant Geographies. In International Encyclopedia of Human Geography Volume 1 12 (Vol. 1-12, pp. V8-V8-203).
DOI
2008 Franklin, A. (2008). Ethnography and housing studies revisited. In P. J. Maginn, S. Thompson, & M. Tonts (Eds.), Source details - Title: Qualitative Housing Analysis: An International Perspective (pp. 249-268). UK: Emerald.
DOI
2008 Franklin, A. (2008). The 'animal question' and the consumption of wildlife. In B. Lovelock (Ed.), Source details - Title: Tourism and the consumption of wildlife: hunting, shooting and sport fishing (pp. 31-44). UK: Routledge.
DOI Scopus19
2007 Franklin, A. (2007). The problem with tourism theory. In Critical Turn in Tourism Studies Innovative Research Methods (pp. 131-148). Elsevier.
DOI Scopus64
2006 Franklin, A. (2006). Tourism. In C. Rojek, S. M. Shaw, & A. J. Veal (Eds.), A Handbook of Leisure Studies (pp. 386-403). Palgrave Macmillan UK.
DOI Scopus5
2005 Franklin, A. (2005). Consuming design: Consuming retro. In Changing Consumer Markets and Meanings (pp. 90-103).
DOI Scopus11

  • Creating the Bilbao Effect: MONA and the Social and Cultural Coordinates of Urban Regeneration Through Arts Tourism, ARC - Linkage Project, 03/07/2017 - 31/12/2018

  • Creating the Bilbao Effect: MONA and the Social and Cultural Coordinates of Urban Regeneration Through Arts Tourism, Hobart City Council, 03/07/2017 - 31/12/2018


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