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Carjacked: The Culture Of The Automobile And Its Effect On Our Life

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Bibliography for Automobile
Davies, S. (1989). Reckless Walking Must be Discouraged: The Automobile Revolution and the Shaping of Modern Urban Canada to 1930. Urban History Review, 18(2), 123-138. Retrieved October 13, 2015, from Periodicals Archive Online. Davies’ journal pursues the idea of the automobile revolutionizing the first decades of the twentieth century. From a Canadian cultural perspective, this journal suggests that the automobile transformed all aspects of Canadian society. The author credits the automobile revolution to the radical establishment of urban-rural relationships, geographical alterations and designs, and a profound cultural sense of liberty.

Lutz, C., & Fernandez, A. (2010). Chapter 1: The United States of Automobiles. In Carjacked: The Culture of the Automobile and Its Effect on Our Lives (1st ed., pp. …show more content…

As much of the book speaks of the tremendous effect for independence on society, it also suggests that the automobile has become over depended on. The authors argue that the automobile industry needs to call for higher standards, to stop and not just slow down, global warming and car induced tragedies, the harmful consequences of America’s car culture.

Mom, G. (2015). Chapter 4: "Why Apologize for Pleasure?" Consuming the Car in Boom and Bust. In Atlantic Automobilism: Emergence and Persistence of the Car, 1895-1940 (Vol. 1, pp. 313-328). New York City, New York State: Berghahn Books. This book was written to capture the grasp of early automobile revolution and it’s effect on society around the world. Chapter four gives great incite on the explosive growth of suburbs and the means of the “commute”. Gijgs Mom claims the automobile gave the public an opportunity to expand they’re business-like horizons as well as increasing efficiency, leading to the rise in suburban

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