“…Grosz, 2017 ; Ferreira da Silva, 2017 ), Davidson proposes to move further away from questions about distribution through two moves. The first of these is to understand mobility as a material-semiotic process of energetic transformation through death and/or the foregoing of forms of life: the movement of humans hinges on metabolisms, either of those humans themselves when they eat or drink organic matter in some form to move themselves through their physical environments, or of the “organisms that died millions of years ago” ( Davidson, 2020 , page 15) and so enabled the formation of fossil fuels. This energetic transformation is not merely biophysical (material) but also entangled with ideas, ranging from the notion that it is perfectly fine to extract oil ‘resources’ for human movement, even at high environmental or geopolitical risk, to the belief that active travel should be encouraged because of its benefits to individual health.…”