In the Netherlands, where cycling is part of the “national habitus,” bicycle infrastructure is remarkably similar to car infrastructure. This article explores man–machine hybridization in the context of this spatial environment made for bikes, analyzing it through notions of human/nonhuman hybrids, cyborg bodies, and automobilized persons. The perceptions of urban cyclists who temporarily cannot cycle are explored, based on interviews with bike repair shop customers in Amsterdam. How does a broken bike impact their perception of themselves and the city? Within the sample, cyclists attribute an essential, corporeal value to their vehicles, regarding them as extensions of the body. Cycling is considered the natural way of moving through urban space, associated with freedom and independence; switching to public transportation induces feelings of dependence and handicap.

When one becomes two. Man–machine hybridization in urban cyclists with broken bikes / Brandner, LOU THERESE ELISABETH. - In: TRANSFERS. - ISSN 2045-4813. - 11:3(2021), pp. 105-119. [10.3167/TRANS.2021.110306]

When one becomes two. Man–machine hybridization in urban cyclists with broken bikes

Lou Therese Elisabeth Brandner
2021

Abstract

In the Netherlands, where cycling is part of the “national habitus,” bicycle infrastructure is remarkably similar to car infrastructure. This article explores man–machine hybridization in the context of this spatial environment made for bikes, analyzing it through notions of human/nonhuman hybrids, cyborg bodies, and automobilized persons. The perceptions of urban cyclists who temporarily cannot cycle are explored, based on interviews with bike repair shop customers in Amsterdam. How does a broken bike impact their perception of themselves and the city? Within the sample, cyclists attribute an essential, corporeal value to their vehicles, regarding them as extensions of the body. Cycling is considered the natural way of moving through urban space, associated with freedom and independence; switching to public transportation induces feelings of dependence and handicap.
2021
bicycling; infrastructure, man–machine hybridization; national habitus; the Netherlands; transportation; urban mobility; urban space
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
When one becomes two. Man–machine hybridization in urban cyclists with broken bikes / Brandner, LOU THERESE ELISABETH. - In: TRANSFERS. - ISSN 2045-4813. - 11:3(2021), pp. 105-119. [10.3167/TRANS.2021.110306]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1649703
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