About this item
Highlights
- The twentieth-century rise of the automobile collided head on with Victorian prescriptions for the proper role and place of women in society.
- Author(s): Virginia Scharff
- 231 Pages
- Social Science, Women's Studies
Description
About the Book
Though millions of women drive regularly, the image of the flighty "woman driver" continues to stigmatize their abilities. Scharff travels back in time to explore how the first automobiles collided with cultural and sexual notions of feminine nature and how women have influenced the car industry as a whole.Book Synopsis
The twentieth-century rise of the automobile collided head on with Victorian prescriptions for the proper role and place of women in society. Gender conventions cast women as too weak, dependent, and flighty to manage the fiery motored beast. Overcoming that stereotype was as difficult for women as gaining access to the vote, the professions, and education, yet their personal feats of driving in both war and peace demolished the gender barriers against their taking the road. After women proved once and for all that they could drive under the worst conditions in World War I, they adapted the automobile to their domestic roles in urban society during the 1920s. Written with flair and verve, this volume displays Scharff's erudition in social, cultural, gender, and technological history.
Review Quotes
"Ms. Scharff is to be congratulated for her spellbinding contribution to the evolving literature of automotive anthropology."
If I had my way, Id make Scharffs book compulsory reading for every Detroit executive.
Ms. Scharff is to be congratulated for her spellbinding contribution to the evolving literature of automotive anthropology.
"If I had my way, I'd make Scharff's book compulsory reading for every Detroit executive."