Publication | Closed Access
Embodiment, Power and the Politics of Mobility: The Case of Female Tramps and Hobos
170
Citations
31
References
1999
Year
Women's RightSocial ChangeFeminist GeographyFeminist DebateUnited StatesSocial SciencesGender IdentityFeminist ResearchGender StudiesTransnational FeminismsFeminist IdentityFemale TrampsFeminist ScholarshipIntersectionalityFeminist PerspectiveFeminist Political TheoryFeminist TheoryFeminist MethodologiesFeminist PhilosophySociologyMoral PanicMobile Women
Mobility and travel have recently attracted the interest of many people, both inside and outside geography. This interest has often focused on issues of gender. Mobile women, in particular, have been seen to be indicative of wider social and cultural themes of power, exclusion, resistance and emancipation. In this paper, I consider the gendered dimensions of a moral panic in the United States between 1869 and 1940, known as the ‘tramp scare’. I argue that the construction of the panic around threats to women's bodies and the actual experience of female tramps illuminates a clearly gendered and embodied politics of mobility.
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