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Auto Opium:

A Social History of American Automobile Design
Front Cover
1 Review
Taylor & Francis Group, 1994 - Philosophy - 264 pages
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.

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Review: Auto-Opium: A Social History of American Automobile Design

User Review - Goodreads

David Gartman is the theory professor in our department at the University of South Alabama, and he's a brilliant man. I adore social theory, and I was one of "Gartman's Groupies" b/c I took every ...

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