Hi folks -- I have been working on translating a source that has added more information to my knowledge of Adolf Rosenberger and his relationship with Porsche. the source is a manuscript of a show that was on SWR2 in 2012. The Author was Eberhard Reuss and the editor was Rudolf Linssen. The translation is mine and if there are mistakes in the translation those are mine as well.
The show begins with a visit to the Pforzheim City Museum and the viewing of a trophy from the Klaussenrennen hill climb of 1927. the discussion then shifts to the hushed up nature of the Adolf Rosenberger and its embarrassing nature with regards to Porsche.
The show also refers to a Rosenberger interview on ZDF "Bilanz" in 1966. I do not know how to get this source! It states how important the design project of the Zundapp-Werke peoples car was to the eventual design of the Volkswagen.
It is stated that the initial capitalization of the Porsche Design Firm in 1931 was 30,000 RM, with Ferdinand Porsche contributing 24,000RM, Son-in-law Anton Piech 3,000RM and Adolf Rosenberger 3,000RM.
Also, Particularly with regards to what would become the Audi Silver Arrows, Rosenberger and significant influence, not only is setting up the project but also in a design where the engine was behind the river. Rosenberger had driven the 1923 "Benz Tropfenwagen" a design precursor to the Auto Union race car.
With the rise of the Nazis to power in early 1933 Rosenberger handed over his front man job at Porsche to Baron Veyder-Malberg. He never was refunded his investment before he left for the U.S., and his 3,000RM was worth 100,000 RM by 1935.
In 1935 Roenberger retruned to Germany from Switzerland, and on September 5, 1935 he was placed in concentration Camp KZ Kislau for a racial crime, namely a relationship with an "arischen"woman. He would be released 4 days later after paying a 53+ RM fine. It wassail that Ferry Porsche and Anton Piech had supported Rosenberger in his release, but Rosenberger later maintained that it was not them, but Veyder-Malberg.
Sources here to follow up on include materials at the Generallandesarchiv Karlsruhe and the Staatsarchiv Ludwigsburg.
This blog will expand on themes and topics first mentioned in my book, "The Automobile and American Life." I hope to comment on recent developments in the automobile industry, reviews of my readings on the history of the automobile, drafts of my new work, contributions from friends, descriptions of the museums and car shows I attend and anything else relevant. Copyright 2009-2020, by the author.
Saturday, January 31, 2015
Friday, January 30, 2015
Juvenile Delinquency during the 1950s and early 1960s: the Film "Moment of Decision"
The dangers that surround the young are more societal and institutional than personal. As a whole, these films suggest that delinquency resulted from two interwoven problems. The first was the failure of schools, court system, and community to provide sufficient opportunities for constructive endeavors. The second was the consequence of temptations society presented children and the inability of overworked or self-interested parents to tend to their children’s development. “Both your parents have seemed to work as long as you can remember,” the voice over informed us as Bill was thinking in Moment of Decision. “Even so there has never been enough money for the things you wanted.” As a fast jazz score conveys the excitement the boys feel, we are left to see the virtually unmanageable psychological dilemma faced by the still-immature youth in our society characterized by consumer gratification. The private need for collective approval symbolized by the peer pressure of the other boys, but also the desire to appear cool and in control to onlookers while driving in public behind the wheel of a fancy convertible, pressured the boys to do what they know to be wrong. In this film and others, the failures of adult society was manifested in the owner’s irresponsible action of leaving the keys in the ignition. Only Bill, whose father has taken the time to teach him the virtues of hard work and benefits of responsibility, was able to resist the temptation.
Thursday, January 29, 2015
Juvenile Delinquents and Auto Theft: The Fiction of Theodore Weesner and the 1972 novel "The Car Thief"
Perhaps the most
realistic portrayal of this form of juvenile delinquency appeared in literature
rather than film. Theodore Weesner’s 1972 novel The Car Thief (chapters of which were published as early as 1967) served
as a dark and rather disturbing representation of the subject in the period.25
Weesner’s central character is Alex Housman, a 16 year old high school student
living in Detroit. Alex is white, sensitive, and of above-average intelligence,
the product of a working class broken home, lives with an alcoholic father on
Chevrolet Avenue, yearns for fellowship with a brother he is separated from,
and desires love from school girls he fears. As the novel opens on a day in
late October with streets clogged with slushy snow, Alex is about to steal a
1959 Buick Riviera, “Its upholstery was black, its windshield was tinted a thin
color of motor oil.” The Buick was also his fourteenth stolen car. And contrary
to notions of the joy rider as experiencing exhilaration, Alex is filled with
fear while driving the car.
the tediousness
of driving did not go away. The pressure kept growing until he felt it in his
jaws, and he began losing his strength of grip on the steering wheel. His
stomach was drawing tighter. It was a pressure, an anguish, which had over
taken him before, but he did not think of that, nor very clearly of anything. He
closed his eyes against the feeling and opened them. His jaws felt chilled. He
removed his foot from the accelerator, and as the sensation was seizing him, he
slammed his palms against the steering wheel, jarring it, as if a violent
striking there might cancel an explosion elsewhere.26
Alex takes his cars on rides in the
country outside of Detroit, hoping he can catch a glimpse of the brother he is
separated from in front of a tavern in which the latter now lives with his mother
and stepfather. Alternatively, Alex has a desire to lure young girls who attend
“country” high schools into taking a ride with him. And it is Eugenia Rodgers’
coat left in his stolen 1959 Buick that ultimately leads to his arrest at the
end of a school day, and the beginning of a rather horrific set of consequences
that first sends him to juvenile detention, then back to his high school where
he is branded as a no-good. Ostracism and a beating follow. Teachers and fellow
students are often brutal and rarely understanding or forgiving. As the story
winds down, Alex’s father, worn out by chronic alcoholism and life in general,
commits suicide. Clearly, auto thievery has resulted in nothing but pain and
grief, and none of the supposed thrills experienced by the middle class joy rider
as depicted in sociological studies. Alex shares none of the other of the
characteristics of the youthful auto thief of his generation. Weesner’s book
suggests that in the real world of a blue collar kid, there is little to
celebrate from disregarding the law, and much to fear.
Automobile History: An Interview on China Radio International, January 29, 2015
Hi folks: the link that follows is my CRI interview that was aired today, January 29, 2015.
http://english.cri.cn/7146/2015/01/29/3621s864033.htm
Here were the talking points:
http://english.cri.cn/7146/2015/01/29/3621s864033.htm
Here were the talking points:
1. January 29th, 1886 is usually regarded as the birthday of car, and the German engine designer Karl Benz is regarded by many as the “Father of Automobile”. Looking at that period of time, would you say the appearance of automobile was something inevitable or something very accidental?
2. Concerning the early history of automobiles, there is a cliché in the west that “the automobile is European by birth, American by adoption”. Why do you think America was able to quickly catch up and overtake Europe in the early stages of the auto industry?
3. The word “automobile” is basically an American term. It was first used in America in 1895 and fully adopted in the US in 1899. Why do you think the history of the US chose “automobile” instead of other words? What are some of the interesting stories behind the adoption of this word?
4. Regarding to the history of the US auto industry, anyone with a little common sense can think of many labels: Henry Ford and mass production, the General Motors and its long-time CEO Alfred Sloan, the rise and decline of Detroit, and so on. But what is usually neglected by people when they talk about the history of auto industry?
5. In China, it was not until the 90s and the beginning of the 21st century that private cars came into the lives of the ordinary citizens. In history, did the US have a similar transition in terms of car users?
6. I read the introduction part of your book “The Automobile and American Life” where you said the work you have done through this book is sort of like your “auto-biography”. Tell us how, over the years, your perception of automobile has evolved.
7. In the introduction of the book, you also argue that the automobile and its related infrastructure transformed everyday life as well as our basic values. I have no difficulty in understanding “transforming everyday life”, but could you elaborate a little bit more on “transforming our basic values”?
8. If you were to put your fingers on five major influences the auto industry has made upon the human society, either positive or negative, what are they?
9. In the course of the 20th century, many technological products have come and go. People fell in love with them and then dump them. But automobiles have survived and remain as popular today. What are some of the most important factors behind its survival?
10. When there are so many cars on roads, management of these cars inevitably becomes a problem, notably with regard to traffic jam and parking space. What would be your advice on how to address the dilemma between producing more cars and less congestion on roads?
11. From a historian’s perspective, what is the direction in which today’s auto industry is going?
Monday, January 26, 2015
Mercedes-Benz 540 K Streamliner (W 29, 1938)
Back to the future – ahead of its time: Mercedes-Benz 540 K Streamliner (W 29), 1938. Built as a one-off model in the special vehicle production unit of the Mercedes-Benz Sindelfingen plant. Following its restoration and reconstruction to the original condition, the car is brought back into the public eye by Mercedes-Benz Classic in mid-2014. The measurement in the wind tunnel in Stuttgart-Untertürkheim in May 2014 delivers a sensational drag coefficient of Cd = 0.36
Mercedes-Benz 540 K Streamliner (W 29, 1938)
Built in 1938, the Mercedes-Benz 540 K Streamliner was the pinnacle of the aerodynamically optimised vehicles developed by Mercedes-Benz in the 1930s. Based on the Stuttgart-based brand's top sports car model, this unique vehicle set benchmarks both in technical and aesthetic terms. It allowed Mercedes-Benz to take the lead in a development that occupied the entire automobile industry at that time: the rapid pace of technical change and the growing network of fast roads enabling higher potential cruising speeds. Consequently, the aerodynamics of powerful passenger cars became increasingly important with regard to efficiency too. With its aluminium body's flowing lines and low silhouette, minimal sources of disturbance on its surface and underbody cladding, the Streamliner applied research findings in an exemplary way, giving it a sensationally low drag coefficient (Cd value) of 0.36. In 2014, Mercedes-Benz unveiled the vehicle to the public once more following lavish restoration.
Technical data for the Mercedes-Benz 540 K Streamliner (W 29) Cylinder arrangement: 8/in-line
Displacement: 5401 cc
Output: 85 kW (115 hp) or 132 kW (180 hp) with belt-driven supercharger
Top speed: 185 km/h
Displacement: 5401 cc
Output: 85 kW (115 hp) or 132 kW (180 hp) with belt-driven supercharger
Top speed: 185 km/h
Friday, January 23, 2015
Automobile Theft and Juvenile Delinquency during the 1950s
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover reported to Motor Trend readers in 1952 that: “automobiles
now are among the largest items on the nation’s ledger of annual losses due to
theft.”12 Indeed, between 1945 and 1952 more than a million vehicles
were stolen. In 1951 alone, an estimated 196,960 cars worth more than $190
million were counted as taken. The 1950s were considered as the Golden Age of
the automobile in America, and they were also golden years for auto thieves.
In confronting the auto theft
problem during the 1950s and 1960s, politicians and local law enforcement
officials regarded the auto theft problem as largely a youth or juvenile
delinquent problem.13 Organized crime or rings remained a very real
threat to motor vehicle owners. However, it was a threat largely subsumed by
concerns about the next generation, the future of American society, and the
tendency of young people to defy authority and commit largely victimless crimes.
The enlightened response toward young offenders that followed stressed reduced
punishment, understanding young adult psychology and sociology, and above all
education. The hard line stressing strong absolute values and harsh punishment
was largely thrown out the window, at least in public pronouncements. Prevailing
attitudes of the day suggested that criminal behavior was a social disease, the
result of a breakdown of society and values, and that the youthful car thief
was to be treated with compassion and understanding. To that end, a 1955 Senate
report pointed to the high rates of imprisonment under the Dyer Act and argued
that juveniles taking joy rides across state lines were never meant to be
covered by that law. Rather it was seen that these youngsters had “misappropriated
cars with no intent to steal.”14
Compassion and understanding did
little to arrest the meteoric rise of joy riding and juvenile delinquency. It
was one more phenomena that added to the fears surrounding the early Cold War
era. Then and now, government bureaucrats were fixated on statistics, regardless
of whether they were helpful or misleading. And the statistics, despite their
shortcomings, indicated a dangerous trend. For example, in 1948 young persons
under the age of 17 were responsible for 17 percent of all car thefts, while
four years later, in 1952, some 52 percent of auto thefts were committed by
thieves under the age of 17. This disconcerting trend continued unabated until
the mid-1950s. In 1956, of the 28,035 auto thieves who were arrested, some 39
percent were 15 or younger, 56 percent were 16 or younger, and 73 percent under
the age of 18. And at the federal level, some 55.5 percent of all juvenile cases
brought before the courts involved auto theft. Indeed, by the mid-1950s,
teenagers were committing the majority of larcenies and burglaries, a statistic
that did not augur well for a free and democratic United States engaged in a
life and death struggle with global communism. Further analysis of auto thefts
showed that this crime was overwhelmingly perpetrated by young males (the ratio
of male to female was 120:1), and that the urban rate for such crimes was three
to four times higher than offenses taking place in rural areas.15
Sociologists William W. Wattenberg
and James Balistrieri fleshed out the motives and class origins of these young
criminals in an important study published in 1952. Their investigation of
violators in Detroit was most disturbing to those involved in law enforcement,
the courts, social work, and above all the parents of adolescents.16
By examining the arrest data of nearly 4,000 young people in Detroit in 1948,
Wattenberg and Balistrieri concluded that the majority of auto thieves in this
group came from above-average homes, had grown up in racially homogeneous
areas, lived in an economically and sociologically stable home environment, and
perhaps surprisingly, were on the whole better socially adjusted when compared
to their peers. Why did they steal cars? As one New York City policeman would
surmise a bit later in the decade, “for the sheer hell of it.”17 Wattenberg
and Balistrieri concluded that the failure of community controls coupled with
opportunity, amusement, and trifling punishment were at the heart of this major
social problem.
Another study from the period,
however, that of Logan A. Hidy, demonstrated the complexities associated with
any analysis of joy riding.18 As part of a survey of boys committed
to the Boys’ Industrial School in Lancaster, Ohio for the offense of auto theft,
Hidy explored the motives of a group of 98 young men. While some 42 percent
stated that they stole cars for fun, a surprising 48 percent claimed that they
took a vehicle because they needed temporary transportation, understandably so,
since half of that second cohort was runaways.19 As it turned out,
almost all of the stolen vehicles were unlocked and open, and 80 percent had
the key in the ignition lock. Only four of the 98 boys intended to keep the car
they had taken, and only one wanted to sell the vehicle.
While the Hidy study went largely
unnoticed, the Wattenberg and Balistieri article became the starting point for
many follow-up investigations conducted during the 1950s and 1960s. For
example, between January 1952 and December 1954, Erwin Schepses conducted a
careful study of 81 boys who had previously been involved in one or more car
thefts and were committed to the New York State Training School for Boys in located
in Warwick, New York. The group of younger boys, who had previously lived
either in the New York City area or in rural Orange County, New York, were categorized
in one of two groups: one cohort only stole cars; the other stole cars and also
had committed other antisocial acts like larceny, assault, or crimes of a
sexual nature. Motives for what was concluded to be mostly impulsive behavior
included being influenced by the “Goddess of Speed,” inherent restlessness, or
an “erotic element.” The latter motive was given an interesting twist in a 1960
study by Juvenile Court Judge Albert A. Woldman entitled “Juvenile Thefts and
Juvenile Court.” He concluded that since “ ‘walking’ among young people has
become a lost art,” auto theft was “almost exclusively a juvenile offense,”
adding that “girls who require boys dating them to have cars are responsible
for many thefts.”20
In particular, the group considered “pure,”
namely those who only stole cars, was decidedly white rather than negro or
Puerto Rican. They also had higher IQs and a slightly lower rate of recidivism.
Additionally, and again confirming Wattenberg and Balistieri, the families of
the pure car thieves were typically economically secure and stable.21
While the Wattenberg and Balistieri
study pointed a finger to the white middle class, late 1950s crime data on
large northern cities suggested that most auto thefts were due to “The Problem
of Negro Crime.” Yet it was not a widely discussed issue; a Chicago judge
claimed in 1958 that the reason for the silence was due to a “conspiracy of
concealment.” According to this view, the NAACP, along with politicians eager
to garner the black vote conveniently ignored the facts. For example, in
Chicago (15 percent African-American) twice as many blacks were arrested as whites;
in Los Angeles (13 percent African-American) 48 percent of all arrests for
major offenses (including auto theft) were negro; and in Detroit (25 percent African-American),
66 percent of all those held in the Wayne County jail were black. Los Angeles
Chief of Police William Parker did not mince words about this matter as he
stated that the “Negro Community” is “his No. 1 crime problem. 22 Furthermore,
a widely-held assumption was that the underprivileged and minorities were more
likely to become hardened criminals.
Wednesday, January 21, 2015
Course Syllabus: HST 485, Cars and Film
SEMINAR—HST 485P1 SPRING, 2015
The Automobile and Film
Class Meeting: Wednesday, 3:00-5:50 p.m.
HM 468
Instructors: Dr. John A. Heitmann, Dr.
James Todd Uhlman
Office: Heitmann-HM 435, Uhlman-HM 448
Telephone: Heitmann-x92803
Office Hours:
Heitmann: MW10-10:50 a.m., W
2-2:50 p.m., or by appointment
Uhlman: TR 1:00-2:45 p.m.,
or by appointment
This
Syllabus is Incomplete and will be Altered
Dr.
Heitmann and Uhlman Reserve the Right to Change this Syllabus
It has been
said that the automobile is the perfect technological symbol of American
culture, a tangible expression of our quest to level space, time and class, and
a reflection of our restless mobility, social and otherwise. Film, a
technology that emerged at the same time as the automobile, has today become
the dominant medium of communication in the world. In this seminar we will
explore together the place of the automobile in film. This story is most
complex, demanding insights and expertise from a host of disciplines. We
have to understand the cultural and social history of the 20th
Century. We also have to know the history of technology and business.
Both of these technologies have influenced the foods we eat; music we
listen to; risks we take; places we visit; errands we run; emotions we feel;
stress we endure; the air we breathe; and the stories we tell ourselves.
Required Texts:
John Heitmann, The Automobile and
American Life (McFarland, 2009).
Heitmann’s book The Automobile
and American Life is our key common reading in this class and the
touchstone for our discussions. While you will not be tested on this
reading, you will be responsible for reading this book and critically
commenting on it in class.
The remaining readings will be in the
form of PDF files located at the course’s Isidore website. The readings
can be found under the “Content Section” and under the button for each of the
numbered weeks of the class.
Grades:
Leading Class
Discussions
100 points
Discussion Participation
100 points
Annotated Bibliography
100 points
Draft #1 of Paper (due before April 8)
100 points
Review of Classmates Paper
50 points
Film Review
Essay
100
points
Film History and Editing Quiz
50 points
Standard Symposium
Presentation
100 points
Final Paper
300 points
Total
1000
In this class we will define the seminar
as a shared learning experience in which one of its purposes is to create new
knowledge. Therefore, the research paper is the most significant assignment of
this course. It should critically explore an area of knowledge related to the
automobile and American life, and ideally should be 10 to 15 pages double
spaced in length, with additional footnotes and bibliography, and furthermore
draw on minimally 15 sources, primary and secondary. We plan to meet with you
individually and collectively during the semester to ensure that your topic has
a proper focus and that sources are readily available for your project. A late
paper will be penalized one-half letter grade per day.
Schedule of Assignments and Class
Meetings
Week 1 — January 12
Topic:
Introduction: The Advent of the 20th
Century and New Technologies of the Car and Film
Films:
“Horatio’s Drive”
Assignment: Signup
for Leading Class Discussion
Week 2 — January 21
Topic:
The Promise of Mobility in American History
Period:
1890s-2000s
Readings:
John Heitmann, The Automobile,
Intro. and ch. 1-2.
Julian Smith, “A Runaway Match:
The Automobile in the American Film, 1900-1920” in Lewis, ed., The
Automobile and American Culture
Kenneth Hey, “Cars and Films in American
Culture, 1929-1959” in Lewis, ed., The Automobile and American Culture
James J. Flink, "Three Stages of
American Automobile Consciousness," American Quarterly, 24
(October, 1972), 451-473.
Todd Uhlman, “Using Film to Understand
the Past”
Films:
“Wild Wheels” (1992) [don’t need to
watch all of this film if you don’t want]
“Henry Ford’s Mirror of America”
(1915-1930)
“Roger
and Me” (1989)
Week 3 — January 28
Topic: The
Silent Era
Period:
1910s-1920s
Readings:
John Heitmann, The Automobile,
ch. 3-4
Jennifer Parchesky, “Women in the
Driver’s Seat: The Auto-Erotics of Early Women’s Films,” Film History,
18, no. 2, (2006): 174-184.
Melissa E. Weinbrenner, “Movies, Model
Ts, and Morality: The Impact of Technology on Standards of Behavior in
the Early Twentieth Century,” The Journal of Popular Culture, 44, no. 3
(2011): 647-659.
Todd
Uhlman, “A Short History of the Film Industry”
Films:
“Mabel at the Wheel” (1914)
“The
Wife and Auto Trouble” (1916)
Assignment:
Term Paper Proposal is Due
Week 4 — February 4
Topic:
Mobility and the Great Depression
Period:
1930s-1940s
Readings:
John Heitmann, The Automobile,
ch. 4, 6
David
Laderman, Driving Vision: Exploring the Road Movie
Ch.
1: “Paving the Way: Sources and Features of the Road Movie”
Douglas
Kellner, “Hollywood Film and Society,” in Hill and Gibson, eds., Oxford
Guide to Film Studies.
Todd
Uhlman, “Learning to Read Movies”
Films:
“It Happened One Night” (1934)
“Grapes
of Wrath” (1940) [not available through the UD service]
Assignment:
Library Research Tutorial
Week 5 — February 11
Topic:
The Reconversion Economy and Film Noir
Period:
1940s and 1950s
Readings:
John Heitmann, The Automobile,
ch. 7
Paul Mason Fotsch, “Film Noir and
Automotive Isolation in Los Angeles,” Cultural Studies and Critical
Methodologies, 5, no. 1 (2005): 103-125.
Geraint Bryan, “Nowwhere to Run:
Pulp Noir on the Road,” in Jack Sergeant and Stephanie Watson, eds., Lost
Highways: Illustrated History of Road Movies.
Jack Sargeant and Stephanie Watson,
“Looking for Maps: Notes on the Road Movie as a Genre,” in Jack Sergeant
and Stephanie Watson, eds., Lost Highways: Illustrated History of Road
Movies.
Films:
“They
Drive by Night” (1940)
“Detour”
(1945)
Assignment:
Film History and Editing Quiz
Week 6 — February 18
Topic:
Chrome Dreams of the 1950s and the Tarnished Underside
Period:
1950s
Readings:
John Heitmann, The Automobile,
ch. 8
David
Laderman, Driving Vision: Exploring the Road Movie
Ch.
2: “Blazing the Trail: Visionary Rebellion and the Late-1960s Road
Movie”: pages 43-50.
Karal
Ann Marling, "America's Love Affair with the Automobile in the Television
Age," Design Quarterly, 46 (1989), 5-20.
Nicholas
Ray, “Story into Script”, in J. David Slocum, ed., Rebel Without a
Cause: Approaches to a Maverick Masterwork
George
M. Wilson, “Nicholas Ray’s Rebel Without a Cause”, in J. David Slocum, ed., Rebel
Without a Cause: Approaches to a Maverick Masterwork
“Rebel
Without a Cause-Primary Documents Set”
Films:
“Rebel Without a Cause” (1955)
“Thunder
Road” (1958)
TBD
Week 7 — February 25
Topic:
Consensus and Counter Culture
Period:
1960s
Readings:
Cotton Seiler, "Statist means to
Individualist Ends: Subjectivity, Automobility, and the Cold War State," American
Studies, 44 (Fall, 2003), 5-36.
Mark Alvey, “Wanderlust and Wire
Wheels: The Existential search of Route 66,” in Cohen and Hark, eds., The
Road Movie Book.
David
Laderman, Driving Vision: Exploring the Road Movie
Ch.
2: “Blazing the Trail: Visionary Rebellion and the Late-1960s Road
Movie”: pages 50-81.
Katie
Mills, The Road Story and the Rebel: Moving Through, Film, Fiction
& TV
Ch. 3: “TV Gets Hip on Route 66”
Ch. 4: “Kesey’s Quixotic Acid Road Film”
Films:
“Magic Trip” (2011)
Episode
from “Route 66”: “Goodnight Sweet Blues”
Week 8 — March 4
Topic:
Chase Movies and the Racing of Automobility
Period:
1900-2000
Readings:
John Heitmann, The Automobile,
ch. 9
Donald W. McCaffey, “The Evolution of
the Chase in Silent Screen Comedy,” Journal of the Society of
Cinematologists, 4 (1964-65): 1-8.
Jeremy Packer, Mobility Without Mayhem:
Safety, Cars, and Citizenship
Ch. 5: “Of Cadillacs and ‘Coon Cages’: The Racing of Automobility”
Thomas J. Sugrue, “Driving While Black:
The Car and Race Relations in Modern America”
Cotton Seiler, “‘So That We as a Race
Might Have Something Authentic to Travel By,’ African American Automobility and
Cold-War Liberalism,” American Quarterly, vol. 58, no. 4 (Dec. 2006).
Todd Uhlman and John Heitmann, "
Stealing Freedom: Auto-Theft and the Rebellious Revitalization of the
Masculine American Self in Visual Culture" Journal of Popular Culture,
forthcoming.
Films:
“Bullitt” (1968)
“New
Jersey Drive” (1995)
TBD
Week 9 — March 11
Topic: Special
Emeriti Lecture Visit—Biker Films
Period:
1960s-1970s
Readings:
Katie Mills, The Road Story and the
Rebel: Moving Through, Film, Fiction & TV
Ch. 5: “Road Film Rising: Hells Angels, Merry Pranksters, and Easy
Rider”
Carmen Indurain Eraso, “Thelma and Louise:
‘Easy Rider’ in a Male Genre,” Atlantis, 23, no. 1 (2001): 63-73.
Jim Morton, “Rebels of the Road:
The Biker Film,” in Jack Sergeant and Stephanie Watson, eds., Lost
Highways: Illustrated History of Road Movies.
Alistair Daniel, “Get Your Kicks:
‘Easy Rider’ and the Counter-Culture,” in Jack Sergeant and Stephanie Watson,
eds., Lost Highways: Illustrated History of Road Movies.
Barbara Klinger, “The Road to
Dystopia: Landscaping the Nation in Easy Rider,” in Cohen and Hark, eds.,
The Road Movie Book.
Films:
“Easy Rider” (1969)
“Vanishing
Point” (1997)
Assignment:
The Completion of a Working Bibliography of no less than 15 Sources, 5 of which
are articles.
Week 10 — March 18
Topic:
Nostalgia and the Existential Highway of the 1970s
Period:
1970s
Readings:
David
Laderman, Driving Vision: Exploring the Road Movie
Ch.
3: “Drifting on Empty: Existential Irony and the Early-1970s Road Movie.”
David
R. Shumway, “Rock’n’Roll Sound Tracks and the Production of Nostalgia,” Cinema
Journal, 38, no. 2 (Winter 1999): 36-51.
Jack
DeWitt, “Cars and Culture: Song of the Open Road,’” The American
Poetry Review, 39, no. 2 (March.-April. 2010): 38-40.
Jack
DeWitt, “Cars and Culture: The Cars of ‘American Graffiti,’” The American
Poetry Review, 39, no. 5 (Sept.-Oct. 2010): 47-50.
Andreas
Killen, 1973 Nervous Breakdown: Watergate, Warhol, and the Birth of
Post-Sixties America, “Reinventing the Fifties”: 163-194.
Adam
Webb, “No Beginning. No End. No Speed Limit: ‘Two-Lane
Blacktop’”, in Jack Sergeant and Stephanie Watson, eds., Lost
Highways: Illustrated History of Road Movies.
Jack
Sargeant, “‘Vanishing Point’: Speed Kills”, in Jack Sergeant and Stephanie
Watson, eds., Lost Highways: Illustrated History of Road Movies.
Films:
“Vanishing
Point.” (1971)
“American
Graffiti” (1973)
“Badlands”
(1973)
Week 11 — March 25
Topic:
Steel Cowboys and the Apocalyptic Highway
Period:
1970s-1980s
Readings:
John Heitmann, The Automobile,
ch. 10
David
Laderman, Driving Vision: Exploring the Road Movie
Ch.
4: “Blurring the Boundaries: The 1980s Postmodern Road Movie.”
Todd
Uhlman, “Delivering Manhood” [draft of article]
“The
Trucker Craze-Primary Documents Set”
Jim
Morton, “Road Kill: Horror on the Highway,” in Jack Sergeant and
Stephanie Watson, eds., Lost Highways: Illustrated History of Road
Movies.
Jack
Sergeant, “Killer Couples: From Nebraska to Route 666,” in Jack Sergeant
and Stephanie Watson, eds., Lost Highways: Illustrated History of Road
Movies.
Films:
“Smokey and the Bandit” (1977)
“Death
Race 2000” (1977)
Assignment: Draft
#1 of Paper is Due
Exchange of papers with
Classmates—review will be due next week
Week 12 — April 1 (Guest Instructor)
Topic: The
Feminist Road
Period:
1980s-1990s
Readings:
John Heitmann, The Automobile,
ch. 5
Harvey R. Greenberg, Carol J. Clover, et
al., “The Many Faces of ‘Thelma and Louise,’” Film Quarterly 45, no. 2
(Winter 1991-1992): 20-31.
“Thelma and Louise and the Cultural
Generation of the New Butch-Femme,” in Jim Collins, et al, Film Theory Goes
to the Movies (1991), 129-141.
Jim Healey, “’All This for Us’: The
Songs in Thelma & Louise,” The Journal of Popular Culture, ???:
103-119.
Aspasia Kotsopoulos, “Gendering
Expectations: Genre and Allegory,” in Left History [Readings of
Thelma and Louise] 8 (2003): 10-33.
Films:
“Thelma and Louise” (1991)
“Natural
Born Killers” (1994)
Assignment:
Return of Reviewed Papers
Week 13 — April 8
Topic: The Post-Modern Road to
Uncertainty
Period: 1990s-2000s
Readings:
David
Laderman, Driving Vision: Exploring the Road Movie
Ch.
5: “Rebuilding the Engine: The 1990s Multicultural Road Movie.”
Katie
Mills, The Road Story and the Rebel: Moving Through, Film, Fiction
& TV
Ch. 9: “First-Person Players: The Digital, ‘Tranmedia’ Road Story”
Jeremy
Packer, Mobility Without Mayhem: Safety, Cars, and Citizenship
Ch. 6: “Raging with a Machine: Neoliberalism Meet the Automobile”
“Debating
Crash-Primary Document Set”
Rae
Hark, “Fear of Flying: Yuppie Critique and the Buddy-Road Movie in the
1980s,” in Cohen and Hark, eds., The Road Movie Book.
Films:
“Crash”
(1996)
“Crash”
(2004)
Week 14 — April 15
NO CLASS: STANDER SYMPOSIUM
Assignment:
Presentations at the Symposium
Week 15 — April 22
Topic: NASCAR Culture and The Fast
and Furious
Period: 2000-2014
Readings
Lawrence W. Hugenberg and Barbara S.
Hugenberg, “It it Ain’t rubbin’, It Ain’t Racing: NASCAR, American
Values, and Fandom,” The Journal of Popular Culture, vol. 41, no. 4,
2008.
M. Graham Spann, “NASCAR Racing
Fans: Cranking Up an Empirical Approach,” The Journal of Popular
Culture, ???, 2003
Don Cusic, “NASCAR and Country Music, Studies
in Popular Culture, vol. 21, no. 1 (October 1998).
“Talladega
Nights: The Ballads of Ricky Bobby” (2006)
Assignment:
Final Papers are Due