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Traffic: Object Lessons

Autor Professor Paul Josephson
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 8 mar 2017
Object Lessons is a series of short, beautifully designed books about the hidden lives of ordinary things.Speed. Bump. Speed. Traffic considers the history and philosophy of roundabouts, speed bumps, the pedestrian mall, and other efforts to manage traffic. Exploring ways to reign in the power of the internal combustion engine, ramp back century-long efforts to increase the flows of traffic, and establish greater balance between humans and machines, Paul Josephson considers the history of traffic, and the political and other controversies that frame the belated technological efforts to calm it. Object Lessons is published in partnership with an essay series in The Atlantic.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781501329333
ISBN-10: 1501329332
Pagini: 192
Ilustrații: 10 b/w illustrations
Dimensiuni: 121 x 165 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.18 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Object Lessons

Locul publicării:New York, United States

Caracteristici

Shows how traffic-and such efforts to combat it as speed bumps-is in fact a large scale technological system that reflects the joys and sorrows, political skirmishes, financial worries and legal rigmarole, and inconveniences and conveniences of a variety of actors

Notă biografică

Paul Josephson is Professor of History at Colby College, USA. He is the author of twelve books, including Fish Sticks, Sports Bras, and Aluminum Cans (2015), The Conquest of the Russian Arctic (2014), Lenin's Laureate: A Life in Communist Science (2010), Would Trotsky Wear a Bluetooth? Technological Utopianism Under Socialism (2009), and Motorized Obsession: Life, Liberty and the Small Bore Engine (2007).

Cuprins

Introduction1. Mushrooms in Minsk2. Speed Bumps in Twentieth Century Philosophy3. Utopian Visions of Machines and People: A World Without Speed Bumps4. Mumford and Moses5. The Historical Concatenation of Congestion6. Speed Bumpology7. Crashworthy Automobiles as Speed Bumps8. Race, Equality and Traffic9. Pedestrian Malls as Large Scale Speed Bumps10. The Woonerf: The Neighborhood Speed Bump11. Taming Roads Themselves12. Curb Cuts for People, Roundabouts for Automobiles13. The Bicycle as a Neo-Luddite Traffic Solution14. Gendered Speed Bumps15. If Stopped in Traffic, Hope for a Crashworthy Automobile16. Safety Delays in the Name of Freedom17. Speed Bump Downsides18. Waxing and Waning of Brazilian Speed Bumps19. Potholes and Paper Money20. Speed Bumps for Other Hopeful TechnologiesNotesIndex

Recenzii

Traffic is both insightful and entertaining. Based on a range of sources, it provides us with a fuller understanding of the methods by which we might be able to control the negative effects of the automobile on our cities.
Paul Josephson, with deft humor and brilliance, shines a spotlight on one of the simplest and most unassuming cures for our traffic ills-the speed bump. That invention is not the new, new thing, like Uber, autonomous vehicles, and paying for transit with your smart phone. The speed bump is tried and true, and represents much more than a lump of pavement. Its very idea is the way we must design the cities of the future for people and not just automobiles.
These Object Lessons books are interesting little in-depth examinations and philosophical treatises on objects as disparate as cigarette lighters, hotels, questionnaires, eggs, drones, golf balls, shipping containers, and waste. Like many of the other authors in the series, Paul Josephson, through humor and intelligence, offers great insight. He makes reading about traffic much more pleasant than being stuck in it.