Speed capital : Indianapolis auto racing and the making of modern America
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Speed capital : Indianapolis auto racing and the making of modern America
(Sports and society)
University of Illinois Press, c2024
- : cloth
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Note
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
How a speedway became a legendary sports site and sparked America’s car culture The 1909 opening of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway marked a foundational moment in the history of automotive racing. Events at the famed track and others like it also helped launch America’s love affair with cars and an embrace of road systems that transformed cities and shrank perceptions of space.
Brian Ingrassia tells the story of the legendary oval’s early decades. This story revolves around Speedway cofounder and visionary businessman Carl Graham Fisher, whose leadership in the building of the transcontinental Lincoln Highway and the iconic Dixie Highway had an enormous impact on American mobility. Ingrassia looks at the Speedway’s history as a testing ground for cars and airplanes, its multiple close brushes with demolition, and the process by which racing became an essential part of the Golden Age of Sports. At the same time, he explores how the track’s past reveals the potent links between sports capitalism and the selling of nostalgia, tradition, and racing legends.
Table of Contents
Introduction. Brick Description: Speedway as Cultural Text
Crossroads of America: Inventing Indianapolis
America’s Brooklands: Annihilating Space at the Speedway
Speed Carnivals: Conducting the Midway of a Motor Empire
Automotive Metropolis: Reinventing Indianapolis
Finest Flying Field in America: The Speedway Goes to War
Sports of Titans: A Golden Age of Racing and Development
Selling the Speedway: A Place at the Center of American Culture
Just Call It the “500”: Forging Traditions in the Depression Era
Tradition Never Stops: The Cultural Logic of Sports Capitalism
Abbreviations Acknowledgments
by "Nielsen BookData"