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Journal Article

Citation

Jungnickel K. Geoforum 2015; 64: 362-371.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.geoforum.2015.04.008

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The article discusses changing ideas around citizenship through an analysis of first person accounts of women cyclists in Rational Dress in late nineteenth century Britain. A close reading of personal correspondence provides a sense of how it felt to cycle while dressed in new mobility costumes, such as bloomers, in urban and suburban English landscapes. Such attired and independently mobile women affirmed or unsettled onlooker's understandings of how middle and upper class women should look and act in public. Some viewers subjected them to verbal and often physical assault. Others, in awe of their socio-technical sophistication were more supportive. Taking a 'bloomer point of view' provides a unique socio-material way of gaining a deeper understanding of what enabled and also inhibited women's claims to citizenship and freedom of movement, especially at a time when women were not citizens in a legal sense. I argue that through these richly described accounts we gain insightful glimpses into how individual sensory, embodied and political experiences collectively illuminate the becoming of 'citizen' as it relates to mobility, gender and landscape. (C) 2015 The Author. Published by Elsevier Publications.


Language: en

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