Parkin, Katherine J. Women
at the Wheel: A Century of Buying, Driving and Fixing Cars. Philadelphia:
University of Pennsylvania Press, 2017. 272 pages, $34.95. ISBN – 10
0812249534, ISBN-13 978-0812249538.
Fresh new interpretations exploring the relationship between
women’s lives and the automobile have followed the pioneering work of Virginia
Sharff’s Taking the Wheel: Women and the
Coming of the Motor Age (1992), including Deborah Clarke’s Driving Women: Fiction and Automobile
Culture in Twentieth-Century America and now Katherine J. Parkin’s Women at the Wheel. The author, a
history professor at Monmouth University, has gone beyond her previous work on
food, advertising and gender roles to now examine women and their place in
American car culture. In sum, she has done a remarkable job in terms of
research and writing. Parkin’s mastery of the sources is noteworthy, as she has
drawn on considerable archival, printed, and ephemeral material to weave an
engaging and informative narrative.
Women at the Wheel
is divided into five chapters: “Learning to Drive;” “Buying a Car;” “Driving a
Car;” “Caring for a Car;” and “The Car and Identity.” Each of these sections
highlight the author’s main contention that women had (and still have) a very
different automotive experience than men, as a patriarchal society defined their
role primarily as “passengers rather
than drivers.” When they did drive, they often did so to do the “domestic work
expected of them.” (p. ix).
Despite its feminist orientation, this book is far from a
shrill diatribe attacking male cultural dominance, however. Parkin’s prose is
engaging, and her use of advertising is most effective. She concurs with Deborah
Clarke in asserting that advertising has “the widest and strongest impact in
shaping our awareness of cars and car culture,” and thus frequently weaves in
specific advertisements with her discourse. Nevertheless, I would take issue
with that interpretation, as there are experts in the advertising who argue
that ads can also be reflective of cultural norms. The causal connections are
far from only one way. Thus with regards to advertising shaping consumer
preferences we have a sort of chicken and egg argument.
But overall, the author’s insights are well taken. And
Parkin’s willingness to tackle recent history is refreshing. Who hasn’t heard a
joke about women drivers and their competency, as unfair as it might be? In the chapter entitled “Caring for a Car,”
the author convincingly shows how advice was often spelled out with domestic
analogies, so that the ideally cared for car was healthy, well fed and
carefully maintained very much like a child. Her points about women and the
licensing process, car designs as having parallels to a woman’s body, the
matter of cars that resonate with women – “chic cars” -- all are important
topics in automotive history.
In sum, this is a book that I will definitely use when
teaching the automobile and American Life in the classroom. Personally,
however, the significance of Women at the
Wheel is that it has opened my eyes to the very different automotive
experience that women have had. In particular I now understand far more what my
wife and daughter think when driving or purchasing a motor vehicle. Whether
that helps in improving the quality of my domestic life or not remains to be
seen.
John Heitmann
University of Dayton
No comments:
Post a Comment