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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Gary S. CrossPublisher: The University of Chicago Press Imprint: University of Chicago Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.466kg ISBN: 9780226341644ISBN 10: 022634164 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 27 April 2018 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviewsCross has crafted an evocative, well researched, and engagingly written account of the relationship young people had with the automobile in the decades after World War II. --David Farber, University of Kansas Machines of Youth traces the rise and fall of the car culture among American teens from its origins in the 1920s and 30s to its decline and virtual disappearance. This very readable book rests on wide-ranging scholarship, including an impressive and persuasive variety of primary sources and interviews. Gary S. Cross is always an interesting scholar and this will be one of his most stimulating contributions. --Peter Stearns, George Mason University Impressive and thorough. Cross has dug up some great factual stories. Machines of Youth is by far the most comprehensive history of our hobby anyone has ever done. --Vic Cunnyngham, president of Cal-Rods Car Club Machines of Youth succinctly traces the accelerated-how could it be anything else?-evolution of rodding into the second part of the twentieth century, where it fragments into progressive and preservationist camps, births interesting subcultural offshoots such as the Latino low-riders and eventually settles into senescence as an expensive niche hobby for nostalgic middle-agers. --Times Literary Supplement A valuable book in terms of its original research and the growth of car customizing and hot-rodding. . .Among the most informative and enjoyable parts of this book are the very large number of reminiscences Cross has gathered from veteran car enthusiasts, generally identified by their home town and date of birth. He is particularly good at evoking the early days of the prewar era, when secondhand virtual wrecks could be picked up for a few dollars and customized into something that would leave most other road users trailing in the dirt. --The Spectator The 1930s through the 1980s represented a golden age of American teen car culture. . .Machines of Youth recreates this fascinating but largely neglected slice of social history. --Times Higher Education Cross has crafted an evocative, well researched, and engagingly written account of the relationship young people had with the automobile in the decades after World War II. --David Farber, University of Kansas A valuable book in terms of its original research and the growth of car customizing and hot-rodding. . .Among the most informative and enjoyable parts of this book are the very large number of reminiscences Cross has gathered from veteran car enthusiasts, generally identified by their home town and date of birth. He is particularly good at evoking the early days of the prewar era, when secondhand virtual wrecks could be picked up for a few dollars and customized into something that would leave most other road users trailing in the dirt. --The Spectator Machines of Youth traces the rise and fall of the car culture among American teens from its origins in the 1920s and 30s to its decline and virtual disappearance. This very readable book rests on wide-ranging scholarship, including an impressive and persuasive variety of primary sources and interviews. Gary S. Cross is always an interesting scholar and this will be one of his most stimulating contributions. --Peter Stearns, Geore Mason University The 1930s through the 1980s represented a golden age of American teen car culture. . .Machines of Youth recreates this fascinating but largely neglected slice of social history. --Times Higher Education Cross has crafted an evocative, well researched, and engagingly written account of the relationship young people had with the automobile in the decades after World War II. --David Farber, University of Kansas Machines of Youth traces the rise and fall of the car culture among American teens from its origins in the 1920s and 30s to its decline and virtual disappearance. This very readable book rests on wide-ranging scholarship, including an impressive and persuasive variety of primary sources and interviews. Gary S. Cross is always an interesting scholar and this will be one of his most stimulating contributions. --Peter Stearns, Geore Mason University The 1930s through the 1980s represented a golden age of American teen car culture. . .Machines of Youth recreates this fascinating but largely neglected slice of social history. --Times Higher Education Cross has crafted an evocative, well researched, and engagingly written account of the relationship young people had with the automobile in the decades after World War II. -- David Farber, University of Kansas Recommended. . .Cross's major focus is mid-century youth who could afford cars--he rarely discusses what happened to youth without cars--and he does not slight girls, accurately showcasing them for taking active parts in cruising and car clubs in what continues to be considered a male culture. . . .Though transition into adulthood is no longer defined by car ownership, in the mid-20th century the car was a marker for many teens, and Cross does a good job of dissecting that connection. -- Choice Impressive and thorough. Cross has dug up some great factual stories. Machines of Youth is by far the most comprehensive history of our hobby anyone has ever done. -- Vic Cunnyngham, president of Cal-Rods Car Club Machines of Youth traces the rise and fall of the car culture among American teens from its origins in the 1920s and 30s to its decline and virtual disappearance. This very readable book rests on wide-ranging scholarship, including an impressive and persuasive variety of primary sources and interviews. Gary S. Cross is always an interesting scholar and this will be one of his most stimulating contributions. -- Peter Stearns, George Mason University Machines of Youth succinctly traces the accelerated-how could it be anything else?-evolution of rodding into the second part of the twentieth century, where it fragments into progressive and preservationist camps, births interesting subcultural offshoots such as the Latino low-riders and eventually settles into senescence as an expensive niche hobby for nostalgic middle-agers. -- Times Literary Supplement The 1930s through the 1980s represented a golden age of American teen car culture . . .Machines of Youth recreates this fascinating but largely neglected slice of social history. -- Times Higher Education A valuable book in terms of its original research and the growth of car customizing and hot-rodding. . .Among the most informative and enjoyable parts of this book are the very large number of reminiscences Cross has gathered from veteran car enthusiasts, generally identified by their home town and date of birth. He is particularly good at evoking the early days of the prewar era, when secondhand virtual wrecks could be picked up for a few dollars and customized into something that would leave most other road users trailing in the dirt. -- The Spectator Cross has crafted an evocative, well researched, and engagingly written account of the relationship young people had with the automobile in the decades after World War II. --David Farber, University of Kansas Machines of Youth succinctly traces the accelerated-how could it be anything else?-evolution of rodding into the second part of the twentieth century, where it fragments into progressive and preservationist camps, births interesting subcultural offshoots such as the Latino low-riders and eventually settles into senescence as an expensive niche hobby for nostalgic middle-agers. --Times Literary Supplement A valuable book in terms of its original research and the growth of car customizing and hot-rodding. . .Among the most informative and enjoyable parts of this book are the very large number of reminiscences Cross has gathered from veteran car enthusiasts, generally identified by their home town and date of birth. He is particularly good at evoking the early days of the prewar era, when secondhand virtual wrecks could be picked up for a few dollars and customized into something that would leave most other road users trailing in the dirt. --The Spectator Machines of Youth traces the rise and fall of the car culture among American teens from its origins in the 1920s and 30s to its decline and virtual disappearance. This very readable book rests on wide-ranging scholarship, including an impressive and persuasive variety of primary sources and interviews. Gary S. Cross is always an interesting scholar and this will be one of his most stimulating contributions. --Peter Stearns, Geore Mason University The 1930s through the 1980s represented a golden age of American teen car culture. . .Machines of Youth recreates this fascinating but largely neglected slice of social history. --Times Higher Education Author InformationGary S. Cross is distinguished professor of modern history at Pennsylvania State University and the author or coauthor of many books, including most recently Packaged Pleasures: How Technology and Marketing Revolutionized Desire, also published by the University of Chicago Press. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |