Description

Book Synopsis
An Open Access edition of this book will be available on the Liverpool University Press website and the OAPEN library.

Since its invention, the automobile has been systematically ‘consumed’, to become part of the fabric of twentieth- and twenty-first-century society, its impact and perception making the car an accurate gauge of changing cultural norms and values. As it grew in popularity, the automobile conditioned the very texture of modern life, and the particularly car-centred society of contemporary France is an especially apt locus for examination. The ubiquity of the automobile across all social strata provides us with a defined lens through which to examine the evolution of French society in the modern and post-modern eras. Taking the Second World War as a pivotal moment in recent French history, this book demonstrates how the automobile was both consumed and fetishized in distinct ways before and after this conflict. The ways in which society evolved from the pre- to the post-war period allow us to view French culture through the prism of the automobile as it embodied technological and social progress in twentieth-century France. The present volume seeks to explore and interrogate the processes of representation and mediation inherent in the evolving patterns of automobile consumption, and their subsequent impacts on local and national identity, framed by a detailed case study centred on France from the late-nineteenth century to the oil crisis of the early 1970s.




Trade Review
“The definitive statement in English on the post-war history of automobiles in France. This book will greatly appeal to historians and cultural studies practitioners dealing with modern France, as well as interdisciplinary scholars of automobility and those working in the cultural history of transportation and technology.”
David Inglis, University of Helsinki

Table of Contents
Introduction

Chapter 1
Theorizing the car as a fetishized commodity

Chapter 2
Motor Sport in France: Commodifying the Car

Chapter 3
An Object of Desire: Early 20th-Century Representations of the Car

Chapter 4
Vers le Midi: The Automobile Discovered and as a Vehicle of Discovery

Chapter 5
Three Ages of the Car in French Post-War Magazines

Chapter 6
Evolving Critiques of the Car

Conclusion
Bibliography

A Vehicle for Change: Popular Representations of

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    A Hardback by Éamon Ó Cofaigh

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      View other formats and editions of A Vehicle for Change: Popular Representations of by Éamon Ó Cofaigh

      Publisher: Liverpool University Press
      Publication Date: 01/06/2022
      ISBN13: 9781802070118, 978-1802070118
      ISBN10: 1802070117

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      An Open Access edition of this book will be available on the Liverpool University Press website and the OAPEN library.

      Since its invention, the automobile has been systematically ‘consumed’, to become part of the fabric of twentieth- and twenty-first-century society, its impact and perception making the car an accurate gauge of changing cultural norms and values. As it grew in popularity, the automobile conditioned the very texture of modern life, and the particularly car-centred society of contemporary France is an especially apt locus for examination. The ubiquity of the automobile across all social strata provides us with a defined lens through which to examine the evolution of French society in the modern and post-modern eras. Taking the Second World War as a pivotal moment in recent French history, this book demonstrates how the automobile was both consumed and fetishized in distinct ways before and after this conflict. The ways in which society evolved from the pre- to the post-war period allow us to view French culture through the prism of the automobile as it embodied technological and social progress in twentieth-century France. The present volume seeks to explore and interrogate the processes of representation and mediation inherent in the evolving patterns of automobile consumption, and their subsequent impacts on local and national identity, framed by a detailed case study centred on France from the late-nineteenth century to the oil crisis of the early 1970s.




      Trade Review
      “The definitive statement in English on the post-war history of automobiles in France. This book will greatly appeal to historians and cultural studies practitioners dealing with modern France, as well as interdisciplinary scholars of automobility and those working in the cultural history of transportation and technology.”
      David Inglis, University of Helsinki

      Table of Contents
      Introduction

      Chapter 1
      Theorizing the car as a fetishized commodity

      Chapter 2
      Motor Sport in France: Commodifying the Car

      Chapter 3
      An Object of Desire: Early 20th-Century Representations of the Car

      Chapter 4
      Vers le Midi: The Automobile Discovered and as a Vehicle of Discovery

      Chapter 5
      Three Ages of the Car in French Post-War Magazines

      Chapter 6
      Evolving Critiques of the Car

      Conclusion
      Bibliography

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