During the past 250 years, American road tourism has spanned a continent and reflected numerous cultural and economic modalities. This article explores specific moments and aspects of road tourism from the prerevolutionary era through the twentieth century. Each era noted encompassed specific aspects of technology, class distinction, and even aesthetic appreciation of nature coded to a time and place. For instance, prerevolutionary tourism was a largely regional affair, with wealthy elites taking extended trips to upstate New York to enjoy the beauty of the natural world. Mid-twentieth-century automobile tourism, however, reflected an emergent middle class, with new destinations throughout the American West made possible by widespread car ownership. This article explores road tourism with a specific focus on how the transition to the automobile precipitated the rise of the motel. Route 66 is examined as the apotheosis of road tourism, and two motels—the Wigwam Motel and the Clown Motel—for their employment of nostalgia, cultural appropriation, and the carnivalesque.
http://dx.doi.org/10.5007/2175-8026.2017v70n1p81Com a publicação de Sonho Febril em 1982, George R. R. Martin experimentou com a narrativa de "vampiro simpático", popularizada apenas alguns anos antes por Anne Rice. Uma história sobre vampiros que assombravam o sul americano durante os anos anteriores à guerra civil, Sonho Febril focalizou a ambiguidade moral, a brutalidade do poder, e outros aspectos narrativos que eventualmente emergirão mais desenvolvidos na grande obra do autor, a aclamada série As Crônicas de Gelo e Fogo. Muitas vezes negligenciado, Sonho Febril é importante porque uma leitura atenta do texto indica a abertura de Martin à fantasia sombria, não apenas no material temático, mas também na inclusão de eventos históricos do mundo real (a Guerra Civil Americana) e instituições (escravidão).
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.