Open Conference Systems, Nordic Geographers Meeting 2011

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Challenging the ‘King of the Road’ - exploring mobility battles between cars and bikes in the USA
Ole B. Jensen, Jacob Bjerre Mikkelsen, Shelley Smith

Last modified: 2011-05-13

Abstract


 

This paper is explorative in both theoretical and empirical terms. Theoretically the paper explores the potential of merging and including 'assemblage theories' into the mobilities research. Empirically the paper explores the battle of mobilities between bikes and cars in the USA. With the bicycle as an emerging alternative mode of mobility in American cities, there is a call for a reevaluation of the automobile dominance of the street. The bicycle is often presented as the 'caveman' in the history of urban mobility, though some scholars argue it is ought to have a more constitutional role to contemporary mobility practices (Furness 2010). In a contribution to the repositioning of the bicycle, qualities and positive impacts of bicycling on urban life are discussed (Jensen 2007, Petersen, 2007). Repositioning and reevaluating the car in American society implies examination and discussion of the main ideas and discourses that let to its status as the 'King of the Road'. The paper theorizes this theme through a framework that includes both cultures and social agents (Jensen 2010), as well as infrastructural networks and systems (DeLanda 2005, Latour 2005, Farias & Bender 2010). The emerging 'Biking Assemblages' of American cities are related to the existing hegemonic systems, norms, and practices related to the car. The paper contains empirical field studies conducted in the city of Philadelphia, USA where the ongoing dispute between car-drivers and bicyclists, in news media termed 'bike wars' will be examined. Issues of planning practices, law enforcement, power, cultures, and material design practices will be involved as the paper explore the changing practices of the US mobility battle as a window into the debate on future mobility practices.

 

Key references

DeLanda, M. (2005) A New Philosophy of Society. Assemblage Theory and Social Complexity, London: Verso

Farias, I. & T. Bender (eds.) (2010) Urban Assemblages. How Actor Network Theory changes urban studies, London: Routledge

Furness, Z. (2010) One Less Car: Bicycling and the Politics of Automobility, Philadelphia: Temple University Press

Jensen, O. B. (2007) Biking in the Land of the Car -Clashes of Mobility Cultures in the USA, Paper for the Conference "Trafikdage", Aalborg University, August 27-28 2007

Jensen, O. B. (2010) Negotiation in Motion: Unpacking a Geography of Mobility, Space and Culture, vol. 13 (4), pp. 389-402

Latour, B. (2005) Reassembling the Social, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press

Petersen, J. (2007) Pedaling Hope, Magazine on Urbanism, no. 6, 2007, pp. 36-39