Watching the traffic go by : transportation and isolation in urban America

Author(s)

    • Fotsch, Paul Mason

Bibliographic Information

Watching the traffic go by : transportation and isolation in urban America

Paul Mason Fotsch

University of Texas Press, 2007

  • : pbk

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [207]-227) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

2007 - Jane Jacobs Urban Communication Publication Award - Urban Communication Foundation As twentieth-century city planners invested in new transportation systems to deal with urban growth, they ensured that the automobile rather than mass transit would dominate transportation. Combining an exploration of planning documents, sociological studies, and popular culture, Paul Fotsch shows how our urban infrastructure developed and how it has shaped American culture ever since. Watching the Traffic Go By emphasizes the narratives underlying our perceptions of innovations in transportation by looking at the stories we have built around these innovations. Fotsch finds such stories in the General Motors "Futurama" exhibit at the 1939 World's Fair, debates in Munsey's magazine, films such as Double Indemnity, and even in footage of the O. J. Simpson chase along Los Angeles freeways. Juxtaposed with contemporaneous critiques by Lewis Mumford, Theodor Adorno, and Max Horkheimer, Fotsch argues that these narratives celebrated new technologies that fostered stability for business and the white middle class. At the same time, transportation became another system of excluding women and the poor, especially African Americans, by isolating them in homes and urban ghettos. A timely, interdisciplinary analysis, Watching the Traffic Go By exposes the ugly side of transportation politics through the seldom-used lens of popular culture.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Introduction: Stabilizing Mobility I. Transportation as Antidote to Modern City 1. The Trolley, the Automobile, and Autonomy 2. Townless Highways and Highwayless Towns II. German Critical Theory Meets American Cartopia 3. The Building of a Superhighway Future at the New York World's Fair 4. Film Noir and the Hidden Violence of Transportation in Los Angeles III. The Public's Fears of Urban Gridlock 5. Stories of the MTA: Contesting Meanings of Subway Space 6. Urban Freeway Stories: Racial Politics and the Armored Automobile Epilogue Works Cited Index

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