JOURNAL ARTICLES
Ebbensgaard, C. L. (2022). Light violence at the threshold of acceptability. Urban Studies.
Sheringham, O., Ebbensgaard, C. L., & Blunt, A. (2021). ‘Tales from other people’s houses’: home and dis/connection in an East London neighbourhood. Social and Cultural Geography.
Ebbensgaard, C. L. , & Edensor, T. (2020). Walking with light and the discontinuous experience of urban change. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, vol. 46(2), pp. 378-391.
Ebbensgaard, C. L. (2020). Light infrastructures and intimate publics in the vertical city. Urban Geography.
Blunt, A., Ebbensgaard, C. L., & Sheringham, O. (2020). The “living of time”: Entangled temporalities of home and the city. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, vol. 46(1), pp. 149-162. https://doi.org/10.1111/tran.12405
Ebbensgaard, C. L. (2019). Standardised difference: challenging uniform lighting through standards and regulation. Urban Studies. 57(9), pp. 1957-1976
Ebbensgaard, C. L. (2019). Making sense of diodes and sodium: vision, visuality and the role of artificial lighting in the making of nocturnal publics. Geoforum (2019), 103, pp. 95-104.
Ebbensgaard, C. L. (2017). ‘I just like the sound of falling water, its calming’: Engineering sensory experiences through landscape design. Cultural Geographies. (2017) vol. 24(3), pp. 441-455.
Ebbensgaard, C. L. (2015). Illuminights: A sensory study of illuminated urban environments in Copenhagen. Space and Culture, (2015) vol. 18(2), pp. 112-131.
OTHER PUBLICATIONS
Ebbensgaard, C. L. (2022). Towers for the night. In S. Sumartojo (Ed.), Lighting Design in Shared Public Spaces. Routledge: New York and London.
Ebbensgaard, C. L. (2021). Collective Matter, Vertical Life. In Michalowska, M., & Cetrulo, A. (Eds.), Interior Realms, pp. 70-77. Theatrum Mundi Imprint: London & Paris.
Luxemburg, R. B. & Ebbensgaard, C. L. (2021). Manifestos for the Night. In Michalowska, M., & Cetrulo, A. (Eds.), Interior Realms, pp. 97-110. Theatrum Mundi Imprint: London & Paris.
Bachelard, Bakhtin and the Architectural Colonic. JoCA, issue 4.
Book Review: Homely Atmospheres and Lighting Technologies in Denmark: Living with Light. (Mikkel Bille), Bloomsbury. Home Cultures, 2019.
Imagining Home. In Joseph-Lester, J. (Eds.) Marketing Suite, 2019, pp. 20-23. Assembly Point: London.
Book Review: The Nocturnal City. (Robert Shaw), Routledge. Urban Studies, Vol. 56(5), 2019, pp. 1061-1063.
CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS
Desiring Density. LSE London: ‘London’s density: Too much too fast?’ London School of Economics, London, 5 December, 2019.
Radical Verticality: Critical Explorations of High-Rise Urbanism. Royal Geographical Society with the institute of British Geographers Annual International Conference, 2019, August 27, London.
‘It is difficult to quantify the harm, but negative effects are real’: An inquiry into (in)appropriate interpretations of light regulation and law and the violence of desire in the vertical city. Royal Geographical Society with the institute of British Geographers Annual International Conference, 2019, August 27, London.
Vertical light infrastructures: domestic lighting, the residential high-rise and the formation of nocturnal publics. Annual Meeting, Washington 2019, AAG3-7 April 2019.
Light clutter. Let there be light, ARUP lighting and The Academy of Urbanism, London, 6 November 2018.
Luminous Verticality: The changing geographies of East London at Night. Annual Meeting of the Association of Social Anthropology, Oxford, 23 September 2018.
Luminous Verticality: The changing geographies of East London at Night. Centre for Studies of Home Progress in Research Conference Day, QMUL, 27 April 2018.