Fr. 200.00

Road Scarsplace Automobility

Inglese · Copertina rigida

Spedizione di solito entro 3 a 5 settimane

Descrizione

Ulteriori informazioni










Despite the ubiquity of automobility, the reality of automotive death is hidden from everyday view. There are accident blackspots all over the roads that we use and go past every day but the people that have died there or been injured are not marked, unless by homemade shrines and personal memorialization. Nowhere on the planet is this practice as densely actioned as in the United States.

Road Scars is a highly visual scholarly monograph about how roadside car crash shrines place the collective trauma of living in a car culture in the everyday landscapes of automobility. Roadside shrines-or road trauma shrines-are vernacular memorial assemblages built by private individuals at sites where family and friends have died in automobile accidents, either while driving cars or motorcycles or being hit by cars as pedestrians, bicyclists, or motorcyclists. Prevalent for decades in Latin America and in the American Southwest, roadside car crash shrines are now present throughout the U.S. and around the world. Some are simply small white crosses, almost silent markers of places of traumatic death. Others are elaborate collections of objects, texts, and materials from all over the map culturally and physically, all significantly brought together not in the home or in a cemetery but on the roadside, in drivable public space-a space where private individuals perform private identities alongside each other in public, and where these private mobilities sometimes collide with one another in traumatic ways that are negotiated in roadside shrines. This book touches on something many of us have seen, but few have explored intellectually.


Sommario










Preface and Acknowledgments
1 Introduction: What Are Car Crash Shrines Doing on the Roadside?
2 Trauma/Memory/Automobility
3 Making Places for Performing Road Trauma
4 Materializing Road Trauma
5 Performing Road Trauma
6 Interpellating a Knowing Motoring Public
7 Conclusion: Melancholy Remains
Bibliography
Index
About the Author/Photographer


Info autore

Robert Matej Bednar is associate professor of communication studies; chair, Strategic Planning + Budget Committee; and co-coordinator of the Situating Place Paideia Cluster, Southwestern University, Georgetown, Texas.

Riassunto

Road Scars uses mobile fieldwork, photography, and critical discourse analysis to show the complex and intriguing ways that these shrines not only work to mourn and remember individual crash victims but work to create a distinctive kind of momentary and mobile public among strangers driving by.

Dettagli sul prodotto

Autori Robert Matej Bednar
Editore Rowman and Littlefield
 
Lingue Inglese
Formato Copertina rigida
Pubblicazione 30.06.2020
 
EAN 9781786614131
ISBN 978-1-78661-413-1
Serie Place, Memory, Affect
Categorie Guide e manuali > Salute
Scienze sociali, diritto, economia > Etnologia > Etnologia

Anthropology, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Physical, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Violence in Society, TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / Social Aspects

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