Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dx.doi.org/10.25595/484
Title
Author(s)
Jungnickel, Kat
Book Title
Interventions in Digital Cultures : Technology, the Political, Methods
Editor(s)
Caygill, Howard
Leeker, Martina
Schulze, Tobias
Leeker, Martina
Schulze, Tobias
Place of publication
Lüneburg
Publisher
meson press
Year of publication
2017
ISBN
978-3-95796-110-5
Page reference
123-136
Language
englisch
Abstract
While middle- and upper-class Victorians were quick to embrace the bicycle, cycling proved materially and ideologically challenging for women. Conventional women’s fashions were vastly inappropriate for cycling: materials caught in wheels and tangled in pedals. Yet, looking too much like a cyclist in some contexts challenged established gender norms about how and in what ways women should move in and through public, to the point where cycling women suffered verbal and sometimes even physical abuse. This essay explores how some Victorians responded to challenges to women’s freedom of movement by patenting “convertible” cycle wear. These material interventions enabled women to resist social and physical limitations on their mobile bodies and identities. Drawing on feminist science and technology studies, archival research, and patents, this essay critically explores these unique garments as heterogeneous human and non-human devices and discusses how they operated as creative socio-technical mobile devices of resistance.
Subject
Emanzipation
Technik
Mobilität
Diskriminierung
Normen
Sexismus
Widerstand
Mode
Gender
Fahrrad
Technik
Mobilität
Diskriminierung
Normen
Sexismus
Widerstand
Mode
Gender
Fahrrad
Publication type
Sammelbandbeitrag
Files in this item
File
Description
Size
Format