Driving Spaces
A Cultural-Historical Geography of England's M1 Motorway
RGS-IBG Book Series

1. Auflage Oktober 2007
320 Seiten, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
Peter Merriman traces the social and cultural histories and
geographies of driving spaces through an examination of the design,
construction and use of England's M1 motorway in the 1950s
and 1960s.
* * A first-of-its-kind academic study examining the production and
consumption of the landscapes and spaces of a British
motorway
* An interdisciplinary approach, engaging with theoretical and
empirical work from sociology, history, cultural studies,
anthropology and geography
* Contains 38 high quality illustrations
* Based on extensive, original archive work
Series Editors' Preface.
Acknowledgements.
1 Introduction: Driving Spaces.
Mobilities.
Driving, Space, Social Relations.
Driving, Landscape, Visuality.
Geographies of the Modern Road.
Contents of the Book.
2 Envisioning British Motorways.
Motoring and the Motor-Car Way, 1896-1930.
The German Autobahnen: The Politics and Aesthetics of a
Nation's Roads.
Motorways for Britain? National Plans, National Defence.
Motorways, War and Reconstruction.
Motorways and the British Landscape.
3 Designing and Landscaping the M1.
Legislating and Campaigning: Towards a National Motorway
Network.
Locating the M1: Regional Planning, Local Protests and the
Authority of the Engineer.
Landscape Architecture and the Post-war, Modern Road.
'A New Look at the English Landscape': Landscape Architecture,
Movement and the Aesthetics of a Modern Motorway.
Towards a Road Style: Service Areas in the Landscape.
'Cutting Holes in the Landscape': Britain's Motorway Signs.
4 Constructing the M1.
'Operation Motorway': Constructing the M1 Motorway.
Song of a Road: Folk Song, Working-Class Culture and the
Labour of a Motorway.
5 Driving, Consuming and Governing the M1.
Motorway Driving, Embodiment, Competence.
'Motorway Madness': Driving, Governing, Expertise.
Motorway Modern: Consuming the M1.
Motorway Service Areas and the Motorist-Consumer.
Assessing the M1's Performance: Cost-Benefi t Analysis,
Scientifi c Experiments, Accidents.
6 Motorways and Driving since the 1960s.
The 'M1 Corridor'.
Motorways and 'the Environment'.
Dystopian and Marginal Landscapes?
Placeless Environments?
Placing the M1 in the Late Twentieth and Twenty-First
Centuries.
Appendix: Archival Sources.
Notes.
References.
Index.
conclusion, this criticism should not diminish the merits of the
book. The empirical results and the study's framework deserve a
firm place in the history of technology." (Technology &
Culture, 1 January 2011)
"Merriman's systematic, detailed and precisely documented
description of the cultural context of the M1 will itself stand as
a valuable documentary resource for researchers and students alike"
(Area, December 2008)
"Thoroughly researched and full of rich ... Driving
Spaces presents the historical trajectory of the M1 Motorway
through a series of cultural and political stages." (Journal of
British Studies, October 2008)
"Merriman provides a fascinating perspective on the social
and cultural aspects of driving and highways ... in this
multidisciplinary study. Includes ... numerous references
... .Recommended." (Choice)
"This is a terrific analysis of the making of a mobile landscape.
It does an excellent job of deciphering the multiple lineaments of
fast, smooth motorized passages of, in this case, the making of the
UK's iconic M1."
-John Urry, University of Lancaster
"The M1 has been with us for long enough for us to take it for
granted and proceed (along it) as if it had always been there.
Consequently it was ripe for just this kind of cultural historical
study that reminds us it was once shockingly new, a less than
certain enterprise and, ultimately, an astounding (and still
evolving) construction in soil, concrete and guttering."
-Eric Laurier, University of Edinburgh