Transportation and revolt pigeons, mules, canals, and the vanishing geographies of subversive mobility Jacob Shell
Material type: TextPublication details: Cambridge [a. o.] The MIT Press 2015Description: 196 p. illContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780262029339Subject(s): Transportation and state -- History | Transportation -- Social aspects | Subversive activities -- Prevention | Insurgency | Smuggling -- Prevention | Pack animals (Transportation) | транспортные услуги | вьючно-верховой транспорт | вьючные животные | контрабандаDDC classification: 388 LOC classification: HE193 | .S54 2015Other classification: У9(4/8)373.5-03Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Выдается в читальный зал | НОЦ "Соц.-полит. исследования технологий" | У3/4 S53 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available (Ограниченный доступ) | 13820000871222 |
Includes bibliographical references
Index: p. [187]-196
Mules and upland banditry -- Transportation across intermediate states of matter -- Elephants, shat khats, and seas of mud -- Camels and granules -- The Asian elephant in Africa: paths not taken -- Many-headed monsters and guerrilla sled dogs -- Pidgin coalitions -- Unmappable mobility and the elements: six geographies of possibility -- Fly-boaters, filibusters, and canals -- Britain's missing ship canal era -- Railroads versus canals -- Canal people -- Ribbonists, Fenians, and waterways -- Dempingen -- Chenangoes: the replanning of freight flows in New York City -- Why doesn't New York City have a subway system for freight? -- The Chenangoes of throttled! -- Casual harbor work, shadow manufacturing, and comprehensive planning -- Transshipment of uranium -- Contrasting visions of transport labor.
"Modes of transportation understood, by political regimes in different times and places, as intrinsically useful for clandestine movement, subversive mobility, and smuggling for revolt. Contents: Chapters look at canal transportation, several types of animal transportation (mules, elephants, camels and sled-dogs are all treated at some length), and inner-city freight-carrying infrastructure"--Provided by publisher.
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