Repository | Book | Chapter

186946

(2014) Researching and representing mobilities, Dordrecht, Springer.

Constructing the mobile city

gendered mobilities in London fiction

Lesley Murray

pp. 57-77

In the period leading up to the 1851 Great Exhibition in Crystal Palace, London, George Shove designed a mobile device for navigating the city (Janes, 2012), a leather glove printed with a map of London landmarks designed for mobile women (illustrated on the front cover). This was a key time for world cities like London, competing, in this early period of modernity, on a global stage. It was also a significant era in relation to gendered mobilities as (middle-class) women became increasingly visible in "public" spaces such as shopping arcades, department stores and the Great Exhibition itself. Shove's design, however, was not produced commercially. It may well have been considered too dangerous.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1057/9781137346667_4

Full citation:

Murray, L. (2014)., Constructing the mobile city: gendered mobilities in London fiction, in L. Murray & S. Upstone (eds.), Researching and representing mobilities, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 57-77.

This document is unfortunately not available for download at the moment.