[Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield]
Note: This book review was written for the
Sports Literature Association and also appears on their website hosted by the University of Texas -- Arlington.
Motorsports and American Culture:
From Demolition Derbies to NASCAR edited by Mark D. Howell and John
D. Miller
Howell's and Miller's
Motorsports and American Culture: From Demolition Derbies to NASCAR
is a welcome publication in the small but growing field of motor sports
studies. While a bit uneven at times, collections of essays such as
this one offering different perspectives on a common theme can be
exciting reads because one witnesses on the page scholars in the act of
angling approaches to a newer area of study. Books analyzing Emily
Dickinson's correspondence, for example, illustrate this. So have early
critical collections about the Harry Potter phenomenon in children's
literature and popular culture. While each essay here cites earlier
writings by other scholarly fans of speed, the editors assert that their
collection is possibly the most diverse treatment available so far.
That description may be quite apt.
The book's introduction provides a brief orientation about motor
sports within American culture and attempts to address the question that
inevitably gets asked of those who conduct racy research, "Why study
motor sports?" Following that, the book is made up of 12 essays, each by
a different author. The essays are grouped into four parts: Part I:
"Speed and Spectators: What Motorsports Means to Fans;" Part II: "The
Track and Beyond: Motorsports and Community Identity;" Part III:
"Fenders and Genders: Motorsports Femininity, and Masculinity;" and
Part IV: "Stars of the Road: Spectacular Drivers and Spectacular
Feats." Five of the 12 essays are illustrated with black and white
photographs. End notes including citation information follow each
essay, and the book contains a useful bibliography and index as well as
notes about the contributors and editors at the back.
Perhaps predictably in a book published in 2014 that examines how
motor sports relate to American culture, half of the essays here are
about NASCAR. James Wright's essay opening the volume, "The NASCAR
Paradox," suggests that the growing popularity of NASCAR – once a
stronghold sport of the American South but now the second most viewed
sport across the United States next to football – does not say that the
South is becoming more like the rest of the country but instead the
shift "reveals a nation becoming more like the South" (4). Taking a
historical approach, Dan Pierce's essay, "'What Is Your Racket,
Brother?'" traces how Charlotte, North Carolina became the "home" of
NASCAR over Atlanta, Georgia – represented by the establishment there of
NASCAR'S Hall of Fame in Charlotte – by showing how the latter city
purposely rid itself of known bootlegger race car drivers in the
mid-twentieth century.
Through a "Soccer Mom" / NASCAR Dad" framework, Patricia Lee
Yongue's "'Way Tight' or 'Wicked Loose'" shows how she believes the
series reinforces male stereotypes and argues that some male fans enjoy
NASCAR because, for them, it may serve as a "force by which traditional
American manhood will be reclaimed from diversity" (145). Ehren Helmut
Pflugfelder examines nationalism as it relates to international
influence arriving in NASCAR in the early twenty-first century along
with its effects on fans who "consume" the sport. Jaime Noble Gassmann
writes in "The Spectacle of NASCAR" about how NASCAR teams use
"enchantment" to create a bond between driver and fan that "promotes the
fans' consumption of NASCAR-related products and sponsor-created
identities" (150).
Outside of NASCAR, Susan Falls writes about the crash-banging of
cars into one another without any suggestion of racing in between at
demolition derbies as "creative destruction," a form of "theater" (58).
Like Yongue's essay, gender studies also provide John Edwin Mason with a
lens through which he looks at motor sports in America. He argues it
is one of the few activities where females compete in the same
professional series and arenas as men in "Anything but a Novelty:
Women, Girls, and Friday Night Drag Racing."
Essays about individual drivers, types of cars, or events include
one by Lisa Napoli on Barney Oldfield, an early twentieth-century racer
turned celebrity; another by Martha Kreszock, Suzanne Wise, and
Margaret Freeman about stock car racer, Louise Smith who competed from
1946 to 1956; and an essay by David N. Lucsko about the history of the
American hot rod. The book closes with an essay by Ronald Shook tracing
three eras of attempts to set and subsequently break the land speed
record on the Bonneville Salt Flats and elsewhere.
Surprises that may make the collection ideal for some readers
relishing the unexpected may puzzle others looking for examinations of
more "traditional" forms of motor sports – i.e. races of various kinds
of cars and motorcycles. Most notably in the unexpected category –
acknowledged by the editors themselves in their introduction as a bit of
a "stretch" – is Emily Godbey's essay, "Speed and Destruction at the
Fair." This piece talks about an exhibition of nineteenth-century
locomotives plowing into one another at the 1896 Iowa State Fair, which
Godbey argues is an example of Americans' combined feelings of
astonishment and terror towards technology, something she calls the
"technological sublime" (40). Outlier though it may be, the chapter's
consideration of technology and spectacle has, as the editors argue,
reverberations with other essays in the book.
The editors acknowledge that the collection represents
"beginnings rather than endings" in the study of motor sports and
American culture. Among the more notable vacancies is the lack of an
essay about the Indianapolis Motor Speedway or its historic event, the
Indy 500. Situated in the Midwest heartland as it is, on the same
footprint of land with a history reaching back to 1908, that facility
still holds the record as the largest sports spectator venue on the
planet, seating 250,000 with grounds occupancy of 400,000. Indy
warrants inclusion, as do many other subjects, in a book with a title as
inclusive as this one. Contrarily, with its heavy emphasis on stock
car racing, the book may have benefited from shifting its focus and
title to include essays about NASCAR exclusively.
These suggestions aside, this rather eclectic mix of essays does
demonstrate a range in current scholars' interests and thinking, and
that alone is worthwhile for others researching trackside out there who
may look to this book for ideas, approaches, or even just a sense that
they are not alone in their speed-driven curiosities. However balanced
or not the book is as a collection, this volume suggests a variety of
directions and approaches that are bound to stimulate further thinking
and exploration of motor sports, speed, gender, popular culture, and
technology.
Howell, Mark D. and John D. Miller, eds. Motorsports and American Culture: From Demolition Derbies to NASCAR. Lanham, MD:
Rowman & Littlefield, 2014.
248 pp. Hardcover, $75.00. ISBN: 978-1-4422-3096-5. eBook, $74.99. ISBN: 978-1-4422-3097-2.
Copyright © by Connie Ann Kirk.