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Books > Sport & Leisure > Sports & outdoor recreation > Active outdoor pursuits > Walking, hiking, trekking
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America on Foot - Walking and Pedestrianism in the 20th Century (Paperback)
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America on Foot - Walking and Pedestrianism in the 20th Century (Paperback)
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Hippocrates, one of history's earliest known physicians, once
asserted, ""Walking is man's best medicine."" Over the last three
centuries, people have endorsed walking for a variety of
reasons--health among them. Before the 1700s, people walked as an
essential part of their lifestyle. With the coming of the
transportation revolution--and the advent of such conveyances as
horse-drawn coaches, railways and automobiles--walking became
something that was done increasingly out of choice rather than
necessity. England's fashionable society engaged in afternoon
promenades as a stylish fad. While America's vast distances and
sparse settlements made this activity impractical, Americans
nevertheless took to walking in other ways, including engaging in
long distance walking competitions complete with spectators and
prize money. Thus, for most of the twentieth century, the activity
of walking was much more than a means of transportation. Beginning
with the history of walking as a social activity, the book
discusses the various issues which have affected walkers, including
increased automobile traffic, the attention of the marketing
industry and pedestrian regulations. The work examines the
contemplative, psychological and observational qualities of walking
as well as famous personalities--including Leonardo da Vinci,
William Shakespeare, John Keats and John James Audubon--who
endorsed these intellectual qualifications. During the 1970s
fitness boom, walking was reinvented yet again, becoming an
activity of numbers and equations as participants fought to
maximize health benefits. The book concludes with a legal analysis
of pedestrianism as it relates to sharing space with the
automobile.
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