Civilizing motorized adventure : automotive technology, user culture and the Dutch Touring Club as mediator in the Netherlands
This contribution, which aims to provide a first outline of the history of Dutch automobilism from the perspective of the ANWB as an intermediary actor, illus trates that for an understanding of the success of the automobile one should look at how from the outset the new product and its use have been co-constructed. After all, in the course of its history the automobile appears to have fulfilled a whole range of functions, constantly changing in composition, putting it into a competitive position with the bicycle, coach, motorcycle, tram, train, and moped, and even with walking and the airplan... Mehr ...
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Dokumenttyp: | Part of book or chapter of book |
Erscheinungsdatum: | 2009 |
Verlag/Hrsg.: |
Aksant
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Sprache: | Englisch |
Permalink: | https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29032468 |
Datenquelle: | BASE; Originalkatalog |
Powered By: | BASE |
Link(s) : | http://repository.tue.nl/656054 |
This contribution, which aims to provide a first outline of the history of Dutch automobilism from the perspective of the ANWB as an intermediary actor, illus trates that for an understanding of the success of the automobile one should look at how from the outset the new product and its use have been co-constructed. After all, in the course of its history the automobile appears to have fulfilled a whole range of functions, constantly changing in composition, putting it into a competitive position with the bicycle, coach, motorcycle, tram, train, and moped, and even with walking and the airplane. These various functions were always af forded by a set of technical properties. In the process of aligning functions to prop erties, intermediary actors — for the Netherlands especially the ANWB — played a crucial role. Before the First World War the ANWB began to articulate the de mand for a reliable touring car, while rejecting the racing machine. The aim was to keep the adventure but tame it. In the interwar years, the utilitarian function was added and the T-Ford fitted the call for a new automobile, in particular because the user could very simply convert a T-Ford into a truck, a van, or a bus. Finally, in a last step the emerging multifunctional automobile was translated into a family car for the masses. The main argument is not that each new function substituted an old one. On the contrary, functions accumulated, leading to an automobile that enabled many functions at once. The original first function of racing can still be found in the technical properties as well as in the use of the present automobile. In a country such as the Netherlands, without major car producers, interven tions by mediators such as the ANWB focused on the ‘receiving system’ in which the automobile had to be embedded. This organization sought to model this sys tem to a product that was being offered ready-made by the importers. In this pro cess the black box of the car had to be opened, however. After all ready-made cars could be converted ...