This dissertation examines the interplay between gender ideology, women's actions, and automotive technology in the United States from the beginning of the automotive era through the 1920's. Looking at cultural ideology as a strong yet fragmented and malleable historical force, I have analyzed the effect of popular conceptions of masculinity and femininity on the design, marketing, and use of automobiles. At the same time, I have attempted to show how motorcars, often employed as vehicles of social ideals, promoted some reinterpretation of men's and women's proper roles and places. The auto indeed served as a focus for discourse about the contingent relation between social and political emancipation. While some observers expected the automo...
The 1920’s and 30’s saw the advent of the automotive era in America as Henry Ford’s vision of produc...
The 19th century fin de siècle mood was the desire to resist the oppressive ordering of everyday lif...
This dissertation examines the way experts in the United States, using the rhetoric of science and t...
When Henry Ford presented the original Model-T to the public in 1908, he vowed to build a motor car...
This paper examines how the automobile, as an important part of American culture, transformed Americ...
Popular perceptions of the woman driver have long relied upon two persistent stereotypes. The origin...
The purpose of this thesis is to provide factual evidence to support the notion that the automobile ...
This thesis is an attempt to place the introduction of the automobile to the United States within it...
This paper analyses cultural signification in the co-production of gender and technology. Focusing o...
This study argues that society's choices between possible technological developments are highly ref...
"Reinventing the Body Politic: Women, Consumer Culture, and Civic Identity from Suffrage to the New ...
My article is devoted to selected contexts of the car as a sociological phenomena, primarily in the ...
The purpose of this article is to analyse women as drivers. The car is, I believe, a vehicle that is...
This qualitative research study aims to define and describe gender stereotypes and car culture. It w...
271 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2001.This dissertation addresses t...
The 1920’s and 30’s saw the advent of the automotive era in America as Henry Ford’s vision of produc...
The 19th century fin de siècle mood was the desire to resist the oppressive ordering of everyday lif...
This dissertation examines the way experts in the United States, using the rhetoric of science and t...
When Henry Ford presented the original Model-T to the public in 1908, he vowed to build a motor car...
This paper examines how the automobile, as an important part of American culture, transformed Americ...
Popular perceptions of the woman driver have long relied upon two persistent stereotypes. The origin...
The purpose of this thesis is to provide factual evidence to support the notion that the automobile ...
This thesis is an attempt to place the introduction of the automobile to the United States within it...
This paper analyses cultural signification in the co-production of gender and technology. Focusing o...
This study argues that society's choices between possible technological developments are highly ref...
"Reinventing the Body Politic: Women, Consumer Culture, and Civic Identity from Suffrage to the New ...
My article is devoted to selected contexts of the car as a sociological phenomena, primarily in the ...
The purpose of this article is to analyse women as drivers. The car is, I believe, a vehicle that is...
This qualitative research study aims to define and describe gender stereotypes and car culture. It w...
271 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2001.This dissertation addresses t...
The 1920’s and 30’s saw the advent of the automotive era in America as Henry Ford’s vision of produc...
The 19th century fin de siècle mood was the desire to resist the oppressive ordering of everyday lif...
This dissertation examines the way experts in the United States, using the rhetoric of science and t...