Buch, Englisch, 218 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm, Gewicht: 342 g
Reihe: Changing Mobilities
Imagining Fast and Slow Cycling Futures
Buch, Englisch, 218 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm, Gewicht: 342 g
Reihe: Changing Mobilities
ISBN: 978-0-367-58224-1
Verlag: Routledge
The imagination of a slow bicycle system is done in three ways:
- Scenario building to anticipate how cycling mobilities will look in the year 2050.
- A critique of the system of automobility and of fast cycling futures.
- An investigation of the cycling senses and sociabilities to describe the type of societies that such a slow bicycle system will enable.
Bicycle Utopias will appeal to students and scholars in fields such as sociology, mobilities studies, human geography and urban and transport studies. This work may also be of interest to advocates, activists and professionals in the domains of cycling and sustainable mobilities.
Zielgruppe
Postgraduate and Undergraduate
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Chapter 1, Prologue: Imagining a slow bicycle system
The new ‘structure of feeling’
The end of neoliberalism: embracing the slow
The urban form
Bike + train + cargo = love
Cycling as mobility policy
From subculture to culture
The bicycle economy and big data
Know-how and technology transfer
Innovations in bicycles and accessories
Broader societal and economic changes
Steps from 2016 to 2050
Chapter 2, Introduction: Tips of the cycling iceberg
Chapter 3: How to imagine biketopias
Utopia as method
Conclusions: Enacting the social
Chapter 4: Beyond autopia
The elephant in the city
From autopia to Carmageddon
Electric, autonomous, networked, shared
The mobility growth paradigm
Going car-free
Careless car-free?
Conclusions: Beyond cars, beyond growth
Chapter 5: Utopias, dystopias, biketopias
In praise of slowness
Early biketopias of modernity and progress
Fast cycling for urban regeneration and growth
Slow bicycle utopias
Mad Max on a bike
Convivial biketopias
Bike spaces of hope
Conclusions: A break from growth
Chapter 6: Senses
On growing pedals
Velomobility at a glance
Grow ears, awaken the whole body
Working the inner body: balance and movement
Pain festivities: ‘sufferfest’
How to achieve eurhythmia?
Conclusions: Flowing towards eudaimonia
Chapter 7: Sociabilities
Cycling as interaction order and sociable practice
The Ride-Formation
Swarm sociabilities
Conversation sociabilities
Carnivalesque sociabilities
Club sociabilities
The chain-gang
The accordion
Conclusions: Fluid Ride-Formations
Chapter 8: Slowness
Need for speed
Tactics of slowness
Affecting the slow
Slowness, sufficiency, de-growth
Conclusions: A norm of sufficiency
Chapter 9: Conclusions