This article explores the 1965 Transport Analysis for Greater Oslo, a municipal planning document in which the routing of a large urban motorway through Oslo is richly illustrated in a series of drawings and prints. The images on display in the Transport Analysis were widely circulated in the mid- to late 1960s, thereby creating a mobile exhibition that reached a wide audience and connected with a number of other images. Through this circulation, the Transport Analysis became entangled in an intricate visual discourse that aestheticized urban motorways and linked up with radical currents in European postwar architecture. While the Transport Analysis has previously been interpreted quite narrowly, merely as the product of a pragmatic engineering mind-set, this article posits that one must move beyond the technocratic level to unravel its wider meanings.
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Radical Mobilities on Display
The Motorway Aesthetics of Postwar Oslo
Even Smith Wergeland
‘I Certainly Wasn't as Patient-Centred’
Impacts and Potentials of Cross-Training Paramedics as Community Health Workers
Ryan I. Logan
Team’, EMS World 18 June, https://www.hmpgloballearningnetwork.com/site/emsworld/news/10963425/indianapolis-ems-reaches-community-core-care-team . 10.1177/0046958017704608 Ford-Jones , P. and C. Chaufan ( 2017 ), ‘ A Critical Analysis of
The Palestinian Flag Is Back
Arab Soccer in a Jewish State Revisited
Tamir Sorek
called Arab fans from throughout the country to come and support Sakhnin against “the racist team.” 10 In the text introducing the interview, the game was described as “the mother of all battles.” As the sociologist Amir Ben Porat has shown, behavior