Article 633AA How car culture colonised our thinking – and our language

How car culture colonised our thinking – and our language

by
Thalia Verkade and Marco te Brömmelstroet, transl
from Environment | The Guardian on (#633AA)

We have become used to thinking about things from a driver's perspective - but is that the sort of world we want?

When we block traffic from a street, like for a sports event or a street party, we say that the street is closed". But who is it closed for? For motorists. But really, that street is now open to people.

We say this because we've become accustomed to thinking about the street in traffic logic". For centuries, streets used to be a place with a multiplicity of purposes: talk, trade, play, work and moving around. It's only in the past century that it has become a space for traffic to drive through as quickly and efficiently as possible. This idea is so pervasive that it has colonised our thinking.

This is an edited extract from Movement: How to Take Back Our Streets and Transform Our Lives by Thalia Verkade and Marco te Brommelstroet, translated by Fiona Graham

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