Hi folks -- below is this conference/paper announcement. I am a member of HVA by virtue of being insured by Haggerty, and thus have a bit of interest in what is proposed to be discussed. Over the past few years I have heard about European efforts in terms of historical preservation of automobiles, and indeed we had a Scharchburg Student Paper Award submission on this topic in the past. That said, I know very little about motives of this group, internal politics, etc. etc. Any insights would be appreciated!
Call
for Proposals
Putting
Preservation on the Road: Protecting Our Overlooked Automotive Heritage in the
Twenty-first Century
Date: October 20-22, 2016
Location:
Historic Vehicle Association Research Laboratory, Allentown, Pennsylvania, USA
https://www.historicvehicle.org/putting-preservation-on-the-road/
The Historic Vehicle Association (HVA)
and the Historic Preservation & Community Planning Program at the College
of Charleston are pleased to announce the following call for papers for an international
conference on the preservation of automotive heritage.
For much of the twentieth century
heritage preservation primarily focused on sedentary objects (i.e., 1906
Antiquities Act in the United States, 1919 Historic Sites and Monuments Board in
Canada, etc.). While some countries have studied and documented vehicles for
preservation and/or conservation, their official recognition as landmarks or on
registers of official distinction has largely been overlooked. This is most
apparent within the field of automotive heritage. For example, within the
United States there are over 90,000 separate listings for buildings, sites,
structures, districts, and other objects on the National Register of Historic
Places (NRHP). Vehicles on the NRHP include historic ships, railroad
locomotives and streetcars, equipment related to the space age, and so forth –
but not a single automobile or similar vehicle related to this form of
transportation. This is also the case for the approximate 12,500 sites on the
Canadian Register of Historic Places. Individual automotive vehicles by
themselves are not listed as contributing elements – just the stationary
buildings and sites. Considering that there is a precedent for both, such as
moving ships and trains as well as stationary buildings and places on
automotive heritage, the question becomes “why not automobiles?” Hence the
newly-created National Historic Vehicle Register (NHVR), which can be used as a
tool to carefully and accurately document the most historically significant
automobiles, motorcycles, trucks, and commercial vehicles, as well as recognize
the dynamic relationship between people, culture, and their means of
transportation. The NHVR was developed by the Historic Vehicle Association (HVA)
in partnership with the U.S. Department of the Interior in March 2013 to
explore how vehicles important to American and automotive history could be
effectively documented. Using Historic American Engineering Record (HAER)
standards, this project is the first of its type to create a permanent archive
of significant historic automobiles within the Library of Congress (see
https://historicvehicle.org/national-historic-vehicle-register/).
The issue of overlooking historic
vehicle preservation becomes further exasperated when we consider that none of the accredited programs in
historic preservation and heritage conservation (more than sixty with the
National Council of Preservation Education, a dozen with the National
Roundtable of Heritage Education, among others in various countries) offer
permanent coursework on the subject, let alone any other form of training or directed
study. This is significant when we consider how much of our global economy,
landscape, built environment, culture, and way of life across the world has
been affected by the automobile. The NHVR is an important starting point in our
efforts to study the role of automobiles in the formation of our cultural
landscapes, but there is much work that must follow. Automobiles have been
designed no less than buildings or furniture to engage with broader cultural
phenomena, to answer – and indeed to inspire – human needs and desires that are
inseparably intertwined with time and place.
Furthermore, cars have been interpreted and re-interpreted by human
beings in complex ways that often go beyond the intentions of their designers;
they are cultural products not only of broad and powerful impact, but also of
great complexity, and as such they must be contextualized in historical
research if they are to be understood. Just because automobiles move should not be the disqualifying
reason for not studying them. Indeed, we have lost much of our automotive
heritage due to this lack of awareness, especially when considering that in the
United States alone, prior to 1930, there were over 2,600 different automotive manufacturers.
Today we are left primarily with the “Big Three” and a handful of minor manufactures.
Not all pre-1930 companies were based in traditional places of manufacture Michigan,
Bavaria (Germany), or Turin (Italy). For instance, South Carolina had its own
independent companies, such as Anderson, during the 1910s and 1920s. Other
countries too, whom we don’t normally think of as having their own homegrown
auto industry, at one time did. Among these are the nearly forgotten Canadian
manufactures Derby, Gray-Dort Motors, and Russell Motor Car Company. This local
and regional heritage has largely been forgotten.
Suggested
presentation topics may include, but are not limited to:
·
Case studies of regional and local automotive culture
and heritage, including those viewed through the lens of ethnic/regional
studies (American studies, Women’s studies, material culture studies, studies
of nomadic peoples, etc.)
·
Considering if there is a world automotive heritage, whether
UNESCO or ICOMOS should be encouraged to get involved, and the role of FIVA
(Fédération Internationale des Véhicules Anciens) as part of this.
·
Innovative ways to add the preservation of automotive
heritage to the educational curriculum within colleges/universities, high
schools, and technology schools.
·
Make better known the NHVR as an appropriate
alternative to the NRHP for cars, trucks, motorcycles, and other vehicles: If
“this place matters”, then by extension, there is the argument that “this car
matters” too.
·
Using HAER/HABS techniques for studying and
documenting historic vehicles, as well as exploring innovative techniques and
tools through the use of new technologies
·
Reevaluating listed historic places and sites, as well
as considering new places where buildings and landscapes (etc.) are tied with
vehicles and people, in a more comprehensive designation that ties together the
NHVR and NRHP, where both building/structure and car/vehicle elements are
equally contributing.
·
Case studies of best practices related to
preservation, conservation, restoration, adaptive reuse, and reconstruction of
automobiles and associated material culture.
·
Recognizing important designers of automobiles in the
same manner as architects.
·
Vernacular automotive design and use vs. haute design
and auto racing preservation, in order to better understand the cultural
meaning of vehicles for ordinary people in their everyday lives.
·
The approaches of allied fields in the preservation of
automotive heritage, such as public history, archaeology, museum studies,
cultural resource management, design/architectural history, etc.
·
Automobility and the environment, such as the
rehabilitation of historic automobiles, and its relationships with energy
efficiency, embodied energy and so forth in transportation (“is the greenest car one that has already been
built?”)
·
Establishing standards for the proper treatment of
historic vehicles so as to define what is appropriate preservation,
rehabilitation and restoration. This can include the U.S. Secretary of the
Interior, as well as the Standards and Guidelines for Conservation in Canada,
among others, as well as qualification standards for the people who work on
them. The Turin Charter (2012) can serve as a template for such standards in a
similar way to the Athens (1933) and Venice (1964) charters do for buildings.
·
Preserving historic vehicle trades, maintenance and
materials to prevent them from becoming a dying vocation through the
preservation of automobiles in a manner similar to building trades professions.
The way we once built and maintained cars is a fading practice, akin to
traditional building trades (carpentry, plastering, etc.), especially when you
consider that it is now standard for cars to no longer have an oil dipstick,
let alone other DIY maintenance accessories.
·
Analyzing the contributions of automotive preservation
heritage events, auto shows, museums, etc. to the economy and tourism –
information that is not always fully included in Main Street programs and other
economic development initiatives related to preservation planning.
The
program committee invites proposals from people of all backgrounds and
professions to participate – from senior professionals to students with
innovative ideas – for the following:
1. Paper Session: We prefer to receive proposals
for complete three to four paper sessions but will consider individual
presentations as well. You are welcome to include a chair and/or moderator or
the conference committee will appoint a chair. The entire panel presentation
should span no more than 60 minutes.
2. Individual Papers: If accepted, we will place
your individual presentation on a panel or roundtable selected by the
committee. Paper presentations should span no more than 20 minutes.
3.
Roundtables: Discussions facilitated by a moderator with three to five
participants about a historical or professional topic or issue. Roundtables
should span no more than 60 minutes.
4. Workshops/Demonstrations: Interactive
presentations led by facilitators to encourage learning about a professional
topic or issue. Workshops/demonstrations should span no more than 60 minutes.
5.
Posters/Short Film: Interactive presentations produced and facilitated to
encourage learning about a professional topic or issue. Poster presentations
and short films should span no more than 10 minutes.
Please
submit proposals of no more than 500 words and a brief CV/resume (two pages
maximum) in a PDF or MS Word format to Barry L. Stiefel at stiefelb@cofc.edu.
Deadline for proposals is May 15, 2016. Proposals should include the name(s) of
presenters, affiliation/position and contact information. While the Historic
Vehicle Association and the College of Charleston are based in the United
States, and has influenced our worldview, we desire this to be an international
conference and encourage the participation of others from elsewhere. The
official language of the conference will be English, though presentations may be
conducted in other languages. For people who desire to present in a language
other than English, abstracts should be sent in the vernacular of the presenter
as well as English to ensure the review committee can adequately evaluate. Decisions
on proposals for the conference will be made by June 1, 2016.
From
the conference we anticipate publishing an edited volume of scholarship with a
distinguished press or journal.
For
participants traveling more than 100 miles to Allentown, Pennsylvania (50 miles
for students), assistance with travel and accommodations for the conference will
be considered. Please provide a budget of what you need assistance with in your
proposal, as well as what other resources from which you anticipate receiving
support. A registration fee will be required for the conference (likely around
US$25 as part of the RSVP system), which will come with a one-year membership
with the HVA.
Conference
Organizers:
Barry
L. Stiefel, Assistant Professor, College of Charleston, stiefelb@cofc.edu
Mark
Gessler, President, Historic Vehicle Association
Academic
Committee:
Casey
Maxon, Historic Vehicle Association
Nathaniel
Walker, College of Charleston
Amalia
Leifeste, Clemson University
Nancy
Bryk, Eastern Michigan University
Jeremy
Wells, Roger Williams University
Amanda
Gutierez, McPherson College
Richard
O'Connor, Chief for Heritage Documentation Programs, Dept. of Interior
Alex
Gares, Canadian Automotive Museum
The
Historic Vehicle Association and the College of Charleston also seek to
encourage the support of historical/heritage and education-related institutions
and organizations on the topic of automotive heritage preservation. Kindly
contact Barry L. Stiefel at stiefelb@cofc.edu if you should be interested in
showing your support, which will be recognized in the conference program and
other materials, as appropriate.
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