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Car Wars: How the car won our hearts and conquered our cities by Graeme Davison

by
February 2004, no. 258

Car Wars: How the car won our hearts and conquered our cities by Graeme Davison

Allen & Unwin, $29.95 pb, 308 pp

Car Wars: How the car won our hearts and conquered our cities by Graeme Davison

by
February 2004, no. 258

To read this story of ‘how the car conquered our hearts and conquered our cities’ is to feel invited – to reflect, as its author Graeme Davison does in his introduction, on one’s own relationship with the automobile. And it requires immediate admission: mine is minimal. I do not, cannot, and probably never will drive a car. I am noted among friends for a casual attitude to such niceties as locking doors. Only with difficulty have I mastered the operation of a petrol bowser.

Yet while I have tended to view life, indolently and opportunistically, from the passenger seat, I have also felt the full repercussions of the automotive age. My brother died in a car accident; so, three years ago, did one of my closest friends; when I was a child, my mother’s Hillman Imp was monstered by a bus, and she escaped luckily with her life. I can, then, in my own way, grimly corroborate Davison’s view that our ‘most valued tool and most powerful status symbol’ has impacted greatly and gravely on the urban landscape. Even a refusenik like myself has had his life reshaped and rerouted by automobilism; to live in a conurbation of any sort during the last century, in fact, is to have been implicated in the car’s evolution from novelty to necessity.

Car Wars: How the car won our hearts and conquered our cities

Car Wars: How the car won our hearts and conquered our cities

by Graeme Davison

Allen & Unwin, $29.95 pb, 308 pp

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