On the Move: Mobility in the Modern Western WorldOn the Move presents a rich history of one of the key concepts of modern life: mobility. Increasing mobility has been a constant throughout the modern era, evident in mass car ownership, plane travel, and the rise of the Internet. Typically, people have equated increasing mobility with increasing freedom. However, as Cresswell shows, while mobility has certainly increased in modern times, attempts to control and restrict mobility are just as characteristic of modernity. Through a series of fascinating historical episodes Cresswell shows how mobility and its regulation have been central to the experience of modernity. |
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Page 229
... passengers a year . The new D pier was constructed specially for the new wider body jets . By 1974 the capacity had risen to 18 million passengers with 42 docking positions for aircraft , and a railway connec- tion to the airport was ...
... passengers a year . The new D pier was constructed specially for the new wider body jets . By 1974 the capacity had risen to 18 million passengers with 42 docking positions for aircraft , and a railway connec- tion to the airport was ...
Page 238
... passengers once they are built . Surveillance , simulation , and security are mingled into a hybrid space of code ... passengers become mere PAX . PAX are passengers - generic passengers with no identifying marks . Once you have invented ...
... passengers once they are built . Surveillance , simulation , and security are mingled into a hybrid space of code ... passengers become mere PAX . PAX are passengers - generic passengers with no identifying marks . Once you have invented ...
Page 239
... Passengers were given cards that could be punched at various points in the airport in order to log the time taken to travel between points . These times would then be used to record the longest time in which a sequence of events would ...
... Passengers were given cards that could be punched at various points in the airport in order to log the time taken to travel between points . These times would then be used to record the longest time in which a sequence of events would ...
Contents
An Interpretive Framework | 1 |
The Metaphysics of Fixity and Flow | 25 |
Mobility and Meaning in the Photography of Eadweard Muybridge and EtienneJules Marey | 57 |
Copyright | |
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abstract American Amsterdam Angel Island architecture argued ballroom dancing became become body Boston Bus Riders Union California Cambridge central century chapter Chinese Exclusion Act citizen citizenship construction Court Cresswell Culture Deleuze Eadweard Muybridge enacted Etienne-Jules Marey European experience Figure Florence Luscomb forms of mobility Frank Gilbreth Gender Gilbreth Archives global grid homeless Human Geography Ibid idea ideology images immigration instance kind kitchen labor Lillian Gilbreth London Luscomb Luscomb and Foley Marey Marey's meaning metaphor metaphysics migration modern moral geographies motion study move Muybridge's nomad Oxford passengers photographs politics of mobility postmodern practices produced production of mobilities refugees representation right to mobility Routledge Schengen Scientific Management sedentarist sense shimmy Silvester social space spatial taxi Taylor therbligs thinking Tim Cresswell tion tourist United University Press urban Victor Silvester women workers York Zygmunt Bauman