About the Author:
Glen Norcliffe is Professor Emeritus of Geography and Senior Scholar at York University, Toronto, Canada.
Review:
With bicycle innovation having meandered from Germany to France, UK, USA and finally the Far East, a scholarly interpretation by a geographer was overdue. Yet the spatial turn of his book towards a geography of cycling covers far more of the often complex phenomena around the bicycle - from Victorian gender cycling to trade-show activities in Taipei. Using this as a structuring principle, significant chapters of the bicycle's cultural and economic past and present are analysed thoroughly. Easy to read, this comprehensive book is an intellectual delight and the first choice for everyone seeking an overall view on the bicycle's standing. --Hans-Erhard Lessing, University of Ulm, Germany
Glen Norcliffe has produced a volume of monumental scope. One that offers a much needed critical engagement with themes lying at the intersection of the social, cultural, political, economic, and industrial history and geography of cycles and cycling. The volume is a must read for geography and planning scholars interested in 'the bicycle'. --Ron N. Buliung, University of Toronto Mississauga, Canada
The essays presented in this book provide a valuable resource for cycling history and culture. Glen Norcliffe is respected both as a geographer and cycling historian, while his own geographical position, Canada, is unusual in cycling history. A particular strength of much of the content here is its wide geographical range, often global in scope, and its engagement with topics that all too often are the stuff of hearsay, rather than structured academic research. --Nicholas Oddy, Glasgow School of Art, UK
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.