2015
DOI: 10.3366/jshs.2015.0141
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The Scottish Cyclist and the New Woman: Representations of Female Cyclists in Scotland, 1890–1914

Abstract: In the 1890s British women witnessed a ‘cycling craze’ that had the potential to enhance the health and physical freedom of many women. This article examines the cycling craze from a Scottish perspective by investigating representations of Scottish female cyclists in a weekly magazine first printed in Glasgow in 1888 entitled The Scottish Cyclist. Despite suggestions that the popularity of cycling faltered after the initial ‘cycling-craze’ of the mid-1890s, perusal of The Scottish Cyclist suggests that a numbe… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…32 Journals dedicated to research on the home nations and Ireland fare little better in this respect: whilst between them Welsh History Review, Scottish Historical Review, Journal of Scottish Historical Studies, Irish Historical Studies and Irish Economic and Social History have included articles about sport during the last ten years, they again amount to relatively few and only one directly focuses on women. 33 This is a strange state of affairs because sports history has increasingly shown itself to be a critical sub-discipline and is now well recognised as a lens through which to understand social relations within society generallywhich necessarily includes women. 34 From the perspective of women's history it could, therefore, still be the case that competitive sport, physical recreation and leisure are still being 'overlooked in favour of topics [seen as more] crucial to female advancement in the public sphere'.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…32 Journals dedicated to research on the home nations and Ireland fare little better in this respect: whilst between them Welsh History Review, Scottish Historical Review, Journal of Scottish Historical Studies, Irish Historical Studies and Irish Economic and Social History have included articles about sport during the last ten years, they again amount to relatively few and only one directly focuses on women. 33 This is a strange state of affairs because sports history has increasingly shown itself to be a critical sub-discipline and is now well recognised as a lens through which to understand social relations within society generallywhich necessarily includes women. 34 From the perspective of women's history it could, therefore, still be the case that competitive sport, physical recreation and leisure are still being 'overlooked in favour of topics [seen as more] crucial to female advancement in the public sphere'.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For one, the bicycle is associated with a range of social issues and environment-related topics-and has long offered academics a platform of inquiry, from its connection to women's liberation (e.g. Hall, 2018;Macrae, 2015;Strange, 2002) to its implementation as a tool for social and economic development (e.g. Jones and Novo de Azevedo, 2013;Nwabughuogu, 1984;McSweeney et al, 2021).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%