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Introduction: historical perspectives on pedestrians and the city

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2019

Colin Pooley*
Affiliation:
Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, Lancaster, LA1 4YQ, UK
Martin Emanuel
Affiliation:
Department of Economic History, Uppsala University, Box 513, SE-751 20 Uppsala, Sweden
Tiina Männistö-Funk
Affiliation:
Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden, and Department of Finnish History, University of Turku, Finland
Peter Norton
Affiliation:
Department of Engineering and Society, University of Virginia, PO Box 400744, CharlottesvilleVA22904, USA
*
*Corresponding author. Email: c.pooley@lancaster.ac.uk

Abstract

Walking is a neglected topic in the history of transport and mobility in cities. The four articles in this special section demonstrate the importance of travel on foot in nineteenth- and twentieth-century cities in four different countries, and reveal the ways in which pedestrian mobility has persisted despite the development of a car-dominated society. Together they provide important new evidence on a neglected topic and hopefully pave the way for further research on this theme.

Type
Introduction
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019

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References

1 See for example Dyos, H.J., and Aldcroft, D., British Transport: An Economic Survey from the Seventeenth Century to the Twentieth (Leicester, 1969)Google Scholar; Jackson, A., Semi-Detached London: Suburban Development, Life and Transport, 1900–39 (London, 1973)Google Scholar.

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5 For further discussion of this theme, see Pooley, C. with Jones, T., Tight, M., Horton, D., Scheldeman, G., Mullen, C., Jopson, A. and Strano, E., Promoting Walking and Cycling: New Perspectives on Sustainable Travel (Bristol, 2013)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Pooley, C., Horton, D., Scheldeman, G., Mullen, C., Jones, T. and Tight, M., ‘“You feel unusual walking”: the invisible presence of walking in English cities’, Journal of Transport and Health, 1 (2014), 260–6CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

6 Articles with a specific focus on walking also appear rarely in Urban History. Notable exceptions are Andersson, P., ‘“Bustling, crowding, and pushing”: pickpockets and the nineteenth-century street crowd’, Urban History, 41 (2014), 291310CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Law, M., ‘Speed and blood on the bypass: the new automobilities of inter-war London’, Urban History, 39 (2012), 490509CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Jackson, P., ‘Parading in public: patrician women and sumptuary law in Renaissance Siena’, Urban History, 37 (2010), 452–63CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

7 For instance Lorimer, H. and Lund, K., ‘Performing facts: finding a way over Scotland's mountains’, Sociological Review, 51 (2003), 130–44CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Lund, K., ‘Seeing in motion and the touching eye: walking over Scotland's mountains’, Etnofoor, 18 (2005), 2742Google Scholar.

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12 Though this is beginning to change in the context of debates about ‘liveable cities’. See for example: http://liveablecities.org.uk/.

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17 Pooley, C., ‘Cities, spaces and movement: everyday experiences of urban travel in England c. 1840–1940’, Urban History, 44 (2017), 91109CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Pooley, C., ‘Travelling through the city: using life writing to explore individual experiences of urban travel c. 1840–1940’, Mobilities, 12 (2017), 598609CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

18 A selection of essays arising from this network will be published as Emanuel, M., Schipper, F. and Oldenziel, R. (eds.), Sustainable Urban Mobility: Histories of Today's Challenge (New York, forthcoming, 2020)Google Scholar.

19 See also Divall, C., ‘Transport history, the usable past and the future of mobility’, in Grieco, M. and Urry, J. (eds.), Mobilities: New Perspectives on Transport and Society (Farnham, 2011), 305–19Google Scholar; Divall, C., Hine, J. and Pooley, C. (eds.), Transport Policy: Learning Lessons from History (Farnham, 2016)Google Scholar.