
New Books Network Tim Cresswell, "The Citizen and the Vagabond: A Politics of Mobility" (U Minnesota Press, 2026)
Apr 3, 2026
Tim Cresswell, professor of geography and poet, explores mobility and its politics. He contrasts the figures of the citizen and the vagabond. He discusses routes as infrastructure, speed and privilege, rhythms of work and resistance, friction and chokepoints, and what COVID lockdowns revealed about movement and inequality.
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Mobility As The Fundamental Lens
- The new mobilities paradigm flips thinking from fixed places to movement as foundational.
- Tim Cresswell argues places and identities are produced through journeys, not just as static origins and destinations.
Citizen Versus Vagabond As Mobile Figures
- The citizen and the vagabond are contrasting figures defined by mobility privileges.
- Cresswell shows citizens’ mobility is sanctioned while vagabonds’ mobility is criminalized or forced, producing social hierarchies.
Routes Work As Mobile Borders
- Routes act like mobile borders that inscribe power into landscapes.
- Examples include US urban highways cutting through Black neighborhoods and West Bank roads separating settlers and Palestinians.

