In cities throughout the world, bicycles have gained a high profile in recent years, with politicians and activists promoting initiatives like bike lanes, bikeways, bike share programs, and other social programs to get more people on bicycles. Bicycles in the city are, some would say, the wave of the future for car-choked, financially-strapped, obese, and sustainability-sensitive urban areas.
This book explores how and why people are reconsidering the bicycle, no longer thinking of it simply as a toy or exercise machine, but as a potential solution to a number of contemporary problems. It focuses in particular on what reconsidering the bicycle might mean for everyday practices and politics of urban mobility, a concept that refers to the intertwined physical, technological, social, and experiential dimensions of human movement.
This book is for Introductory Anthropology, Cultural Anthropology, Cultural Sociology, Environmental Anthropology, and all undergraduate courses on the environment and on sustainability throughout the social sciences.
Preface: The Bicycle, A New (Old) Thing Acknowledgements 1. Anthropology, Bicycles, and Urban Mobility 2. What (and When) is a Bicycle? 3. Constructing Urban Bicycle Cultures: Perspectives on Three Cities 4. Good for the Cause: The Bike Movement as Social Action and Cultural Politics 5. Conclusion: On the Need for the Bicycle
A vivid, ethnographically and historically rich contribution to transportation studies and the study of commodities. The bicycle emerges as one of the most fascinating and unexpectedly important objects of our world.
- Catherine Lutz, Watson Institute for International Studies, Brown University
With care and clarity, Luis Vivanco draws upon intensive fieldwork and meticulous research to produce a rlc0