Volume 58, Issue 1 pp. 94-106
Book Panel Paper

Commuter lives: a review symposium on David Bissell's Transit Life

Alan Latham

Corresponding Author

Alan Latham

University College London, London, UK

Corresponding author. Email: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
Tim Edensor

Tim Edensor

Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, UK

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Debbie Hopkins

Debbie Hopkins

University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

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Helen Fitt

Helen Fitt

Lincoln University, Lincoln, New Zealand

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Michele Lobo

Michele Lobo

Deakin University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

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Juliana Mansvelt

Juliana Mansvelt

Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand

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Donald McNeill

Donald McNeill

University of Western Sydney, Penrith South, New South Wales, Australia

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David Bissell

David Bissell

University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia

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First published: 28 November 2019

Abstract

This article presents a series of commentaries on Transit Life: How Commuting is Transforming Our Cities, published by MIT Press in 2018. Centring on an in—depth case study of Sydney, the book argues the need to attend carefully to the fine—grained detail of the commuting experience. In all sorts of ways, Transit Life presents a way of thinking about urban transportation radically different from that used by mainstream transport planners and geographers. Geographical Research asked six researchers—Tim Edensor, Michele Lobo, Debbie Hopkins, Helen Fitt, Juliana Mansvelt, and Donald McNeill—to reflect on what kind of research vistas might be opened up bring the tools of cultural geography and mobility research to the world of commuting. Here are their responses, rounded out by a reply by David Bissell, Transit Life's author.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.