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The Cycling City - Bicycles and Urban America in the 1890s (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,177
Discovery Miles 11 770
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The Cycling City - Bicycles and Urban America in the 1890s (Hardcover)
Series: Historical Studies of Urban America
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Cycling has experienced a renaissance in the United States, as
cities around the country promote the bicycle as an alternative
means of transportation. In the process, debates about the nature
of bicycles-where they belong, how they should be ridden, how
cities should or should not accommodate them-have played out in the
media, on city streets, and in city halls. Very few people
recognize, however, that these questions are more than a century
old. The Cycling City is a sharp history of the bicycle's rise and
fall in the late nineteenth century. In the 1890s, American cities
were home to more cyclists, more cycling infrastructure, more
bicycle friendly legislation, and a richer cycling culture than
anywhere else in the world. Evan Friss unearths the hidden history
of the cycling city, demonstrating that diverse groups of cyclists
managed to remap cities with new roads, paths, and laws, challenge
social conventions, and even dream up a new urban ideal inspired by
the bicycle. When cities were chaotic and filthy, bicycle advocates
imagined an improved landscape in which pollution was negligible,
transportation was silent and rapid, leisure spaces were
democratic, and the divisions between city and country were
blurred. Friss argues that when the utopian vision of a cycling
city faded by the turn of the century, its death paved the way for
today's car-centric cities-and ended the prospect of a true
American cycling city ever being built.
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