User:ProfDEH/Bicycle culture

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This is a project page, I'm collecting material for a possible rewrite of the Bicycle culture article.

Bicycle culture[edit]

There are as many aspects of bicycle culture as there are kinds of people who ride a bicycle. Sporting types and fitness freaks who never cycle for mundane transportation reasons, only to keep fit and achieve speed or distance targets. People who only cycle to get from A to B and have no interest in bicycles, just ride them. Bicycle collectors who have several bikes, maybe several of the same sort, but hate to get their perfect machines dirty. Gadget enthusiasts who have an expensive bicycle and as many cycling accessories as they can get their hands on: bike clothing, bike bags, bike maintenance kits. Enthusiasts who cycle everywhere and think of themselves as cyclists, read and talk about cycling, wear clothes that match their bike, dream of owning their ultimate bike, whatever that might be. Creative types who are more interested in acquiring new and different bikes than in actually riding them. Timid cyclists who only ride on cycle paths or the pavement. Confident riders who prefer main roads because they are faster - but also ride on the pavement when the road doesn't go where they want to go. Stunt riders. Messengers who ride for a weekly wage. Eccentrics with an eccentrically decorated, battered machine that is something a bit too close a best friend. Individualists who set out to explore the world on two wheels. The common thread is the bicycle itself: a bike requires energy and takes you from door to door, never runs out of fuel, improves your health and fitness if you ride it, needs little looking after and never goes out of fashion. Each subgroup of cyclists contributes something to bicycle culture, above and beyond the bare equipment and the primary purpose for which it is used.

Images[edit]

Agenda[edit]

  • Printed word: biographies, travel books...
  • Artworks, unique and mass produced
  • Bike film festival / YouTube
  • Clothing: Lycra, grunge, fashion
  • Consumerism
  • Eco-trendiness
  • Unusual bikes
  • Decorated / customised bikes / camouflage to discourage theft
  • Meeting places, social groups
  • Breaking the law
  • Stolen bikes, outlets, precautions
  • International culture and the internet

Refer to, but covered adequately elsewhere (or should be):

  • Bicycle messengers
  • Bike rides
  • Activism - One less car
  • Specific events like Critical Mass
  • Sport
  • Transportation / cycling facilities

See also[edit]

Existing links[edit]

My links[edit]

Critical Mass Book: Bicycling's Defiant Celebration