blankimage

Mobility Humanities
VOL.5, NO.1, January 2026

Special Issue

Special Issue: Aspirations of Flight

Aspirations of Flight

Weiqiang Lin and Benjamin Linder

Breathing towards Aeromobility: Aspiration, Flying and Elsewhere(s)

Bradley Rink

Aspirations of Spaceflight and Trials of Infrastructural Capital

Katarina Damjanov

Terminal Politics: Small-state Agency and the Geopolitics of Aviation Infrastructure in Nepal

Krittika Uniyal

Aspiration and the Aerotropolis: Airports, Infrastructural Speculation and Geoeconomic Form

Angela Smith, Peter Adey, Weiqiang Lin, Regina Jefferies, and Tay Koo

From Frictionless Futures to Tedious Tasks: Datafication Discourses of the Smart Airport

Naomi Irene Veenhoven

The Yogyakarta International Airport Aerotropolis as a Political Project

Khidir Marsanto Prawirosusanto

Space of Farewells: Imaginaries, Uneven Mobilities and the Making of an Airport in the Global South

Alejandra Espinosa Andrade

The Air We Fly: Dwelling in Aeromobile Atmospheres

René Catalán Hidalgo

Disentangling the Complex Relation between (Kin)aesthetics and (Kin)ethics: What Mobility Studies Can Learn from Sport Studies

DOI.
Special Issue
By.
Noel B. Salazar
Pages.
103 - 117
Date.
31. Jan. 2025

Abstract

Movement is crucial to aesthetics—the feeling of beauty—found in various forms of art, design, and environmental experiences. Kinaesthetics, the embodied experience of movement, is connected to aesthetics as both relate to our feeling of movement and sensory stimuli. They may overlap in physical performance, where the felt beauty and expressiveness of movement are linked to the bodily sensations and control involved in performing the movements. This can also have a (kin)ethical component, as movements raise ethical questions or challenge social norms and values, shaping our moral perspectives. Our own movements significantly impact our physical and mental well-being, and our social and environmental relationships. (Kin)ethics helps us understand the ethical implications of movements, such as how our actions affect others and the environment, and how we can use our movements to promote social justice and equity. (Kin)ethical considerations can influence (kin)aesthetic judgments of movement. Both evaluate human experience and the values that shape our understanding of the world. This paper, then, reflects on the complex interrelations between (kin)aesthetics and (kin)ethics, drawing upon research within sport studies, particularly on recreational running, to show what mobility studies, as an interdisciplinary field of research, can learn from sport studies.
copyright icon