Cycle Touring and the Middle-Class Consumption of Nature. Anti-urbanism in H. G. Wells’ The Wheels of Chance and Cycling Press Reports of the Late Nineteenth Century

Beata Kiersnowska

University of Rzeszow

Beata  Kiersnowska  is  an  Associate  Professor  in  the  Institute  of  English  Studies  at  the  University  of  Rzeszów  (Poland).  She  has  a  PhD  in  English  Culture  from  Maria  Curie-Skłodowska  University,  Lublin,  Poland  and  a post-graduate  diploma  in  British  History  and  Culture  from  Warsaw  University  and  Ruskin  College,  Oxford.  Her  research  interests  include  leisure  studies  in  the  Victorian  period  and  issues  related  to  identity,  eco-identity and community.


https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9810-8148


Abstract

The article aims to discuss the cultural significance of cycle touring for the Victorian urban middle class in the context of the growing significance of leisure and recreation to England’s working population and the burgeoning mass tourist industry. Cycle tourism in the countryside is presented as a leisure activity reinstating an organic link between man and nature that was severed by the progress of industrial capitalism in Victorian cities. The remarkable popularity of bicycle tourism in the last decade of the nineteenth century was induced mainly by its perception as an essentially rural recreation, allowing cyclists to immerse themselves in the unspoilt nature of England's pastoral countryside. As such, the activity corresponded with Victorian attitudes to nature, their idealisation of the country, nostalgia for the wholesomeness of rural existence and denunciation of the city. The discussion of the phenomenon is illustrated with references to numerous press publications promoting cycle touring in the countryside and extolling its benefits, and Herbert George Wells' bicycling novel The Wheels of Chance: A Bicycling Idyll (1896).

Keywords:

bicycle, touring, cyclist, nature, country, tourism, landscape, Herbert George Wells

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Published
2023-03-05


Kiersnowska, B. (2023) “Cycle Touring and the Middle-Class Consumption of Nature. Anti-urbanism in H. G. Wells’ The Wheels of Chance and Cycling Press Reports of the Late Nineteenth Century”, Crossroads. A Journal of English Studies, (39). doi: 10.15290/CR.2022.39.4.04.

Beata Kiersnowska 
University of Rzeszow

Beata  Kiersnowska  is  an  Associate  Professor  in  the  Institute  of  English  Studies  at  the  University  of  Rzeszów  (Poland).  She  has  a  PhD  in  English  Culture  from  Maria  Curie-Skłodowska  University,  Lublin,  Poland  and  a post-graduate  diploma  in  British  History  and  Culture  from  Warsaw  University  and  Ruskin  College,  Oxford.  Her  research  interests  include  leisure  studies  in  the  Victorian  period  and  issues  related  to  identity,  eco-identity and community.

https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9810-8148