ABSTRACT

‘Hurry’ is an intrinsic component of modernity. It exists not only in tandem with modern constructions of mobility, speed, rhythm, and time–space compression, but also with infrastructures, technologies, practices, and emotions associated with the experience of the ‘mobilizing modern’. ‘Hurry’ is not simply speed. It may result in congestion, slowing-down, or inaction in the face of over-stimulus. Speeding-up is often competitive: faster traffic on better roads made it harder for pedestrians to cross, or for horse-drawn vehicles and cyclists to share the carriageway with motorized vehicles. Focusing on the cultural and material manifestations of ‘hurry’, the book’s contributors analyse the complexities, tensions, and contradictions inherent in the impulse to higher rates of circulation in modernizing cities.

The collection includes, but also goes beyond, accounts of new forms of mobility (bicycles, buses, underground trains) and infrastructure (street layouts and surfaces, business exchanges, and hotels) to show how modernity’s ‘architectures of hurry’ have been experienced, represented, and practised since the mid nineteenth century. Ten case studies explore different expressions of ‘hurry’ across cities and urban regions in Asia, Europe, and North and South America, and substantial introductory and concluding chapters situate ‘hurry’ in the wider context of modernity and mobility studies and reflect on the future of ‘hurry’ in an ever-accelerating world. This diverse collection will be relevant to researchers, scholars, and practitioners in the fields of planning, cultural and historical geography, urban history, and urban sociology.

chapter 1|21 pages

Architectures of hurry

An introductory essay

part I|77 pages

Modes of hurry

chapter 2|20 pages

‘She scorches now and then’

American women and the construction of 1890s cycling

chapter 3|20 pages

The London bus

An unlikely architecture of hurry

chapter 4|18 pages

The tales of two mobility infrastructures

The street and the underground railway of Buenos Aires, 1880s–1940s

chapter 5|17 pages

Hurry-slow

Automobility in Beijing, or a resurrection of the Kingdom of Bicycles?

part II|71 pages

Local and global infrastructures

chapter 6|17 pages

An architecture of sluggishness

Organic infrastructure and anti-mobility in Toronto, 1870–1910

chapter 7|17 pages

Keeping pedestrians in their place

Technologies of segregation on the streets of East London

chapter 8|17 pages

Hurried exchanges

Hybrid office buildings and their uses in the late nineteenth century

chapter 9|18 pages

Shelter from the hurry?

Hospitality in Montreal, 1836–1913

part III|50 pages

Practices of mobility

chapter 10|19 pages

Pedestrianism, money and time

Mobilities of hurry in George Gissing’s The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft

chapter 11|15 pages

‘We’re going to move . . . I can’t rush backwards and forwards, I’ll go mad – I am sure of it.’

Representations of speed and haste in English life-writing, 1846–1958

chapter 12|14 pages

Epilogue

Mobilizing hurrysome historical geographies