The automobile continues to be the privileged product of the culture of mass consumption, yet there has been little scholarly attention to what concerns consumers most - the appearance of cars. Auto Opium is the first comprehensive history of the profession and aesthetics of American automobile design. The author reveals how the appearance of vehicles became an integral part of the system of mass production and mass consumption forged in the struggles of American society. The book traces the development of automobile design, from the first utilitarian cars around the turn of the century to the most modern of symbol-laden cultural icons. The author shows that the aesthetic qualities of vehicles were shaped by the social conflicts generated by the process of mass production. These conflicts became channeled into the realm of mass consumption, where working Americans demanded beautiful, stylish, and constantly improving cars to compensate them for the deprivations of mass production. Creating a unique blend of business, social, and cultural history, Auto Opium connects the social struggles of America to the organizational struggles of designers and the marketplace struggles of firms.
This much needed book is the first to provide a comprehensive history of the profession and aesthetics of American automobile design.
Engagingly written, with lay readers as much as specialists in mind, this book will be fascinating reading for historians, social scientists, as well as those involved in Asian studies, or economic history.
Here is an in-depth examination of the opium poppy--the first medicinal plant known to mankind.
For example, while the upper floors of Sullivan's Carson, Pirie, Scott and Company department store in Chicago (1904) clearly expressed the rectilinear steel frame through the unadorned repetition of standardized bays, the first two ...
In this first truly cross-cultural study of opium, Keith McMahon considers the perspectives of both smokers and non-smokers from China and the Euro-West and from both sides of the issue...
This history of the drug opium examines its multi-faceted nature, spanning centuries and continents. The book explores the cultivation, spread, usages and influences of the drug which has, on one...
For further background on Earl and GM styling, see Gartman, Auto Opium; and Clarke, “Managing Design.” 34. See Thomas Hine, Populuxe (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1986), 93. In his discussion of the 1950s automobile market, ...
Confessions of an English Opium-Eater is an account of the early life and opium addiction of Thomas De Quincey, in prose which is by turns witty, conversational, and nightmarish. 'On...
This book gives us a detailed and harrowing picture of how, by choosing to support ever-shorter product lives, we may well be shortening the future of our way of life as well.
As American culture assimilated automobility, the 1920s became the transition decade for the automobile industry, ... Flink, America Adopts the Automobile, 100; M. M. Musselman, Get a Horse! ... David Gartman, Auto-Opium, 34, 11. 21.