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Winnebago Nation

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The popular critic takes to the road to explore the allure of the nomadic life in a house on wheels.
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  • 08 April 2014
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In Winnebago Nation, popular critic James B. Twitchell takes a light-hearted look at the culture and industry behind the yearning to spend the night in one's car. For the young the roadtrip is a coming-of-age ceremony; for those later in life it is the realization of a lifelong desire to be spontaneous, nomadic, and free. Informed by his own experiences on the road, Twitchell recounts the RV's origins and evolution over the twentieth century; its rise, fall, and rebirth as a cultural icon; its growing mechanical complexity as it evolved from an estate wagon to a converted bus to a mobile home; and its role in bolstering and challenging conceptions of American identity.

Mechanical yet dreamy, independent yet needful, solitary yet clubby, adventurous yet homebound, life in a mobile home is a distillation of the American character and an important embodiment of American exceptionalism, (Richie Rich and Hobo Hank spend time in essentially the same rig at the same campground, albeit for different reasons and in different levels of comfort.) The frontier may be tapped out but we still yearn for the exploratory life. Twitchell concludes with his thoughts on the future of RV communities and the possibility of mobile cities becoming a real part of the American landscape.

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Price: $19.95
Pages: 192
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 08 April 2014
Trim Size: 8.25 X 5.50 in
ISBN: 9780231167789
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

HISTORY / United States / 20th Century, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Popular Culture, TRANSPORTATION / Automotive / History, HOUSE & HOME / Outdoor & Recreational Areas, ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES / Subjects & Themes / Americana

Winnebago Nation draws on James B. Twitchell's own experiences as well as historical and sociological sources to explain the tremendous appeal of the RV for its aficionados, the disdain many Americans feel toward it, and the paradoxical qualities of a population of motorized nomads who seem to seek both individualistic escape and communitarian society. Twitchell locates his interpretation of these questions in the enduring mythos of the road and the frontier; in a lingering Puritanism that demands accountability along with freedom; and in the RV's ability to reconcile autonomy and belonging, wilderness and domesticity.
James B. Twitchell taught English and advertising at the University of Florida for many years and is the author of Adcult USA, Lead Us Into Temptation, and Where Men Hide. He has traveled up and down the Eastern Seaboard in a small RV with his wife and driven across the Deep South, up to Newfoundland, and all the way to Alaska.

1. Thoreau at $4.00 a Gallon: The Peculiar Place of the RV in American Culture
2. At Home on the Road: A Fleeting History of the American Dream in RVs
3. Wheel Escape: Consumption Communities on the Road
4. Park It: From Kampgrounds of America to the Slabs
5. The Rise and Fall and Rise and Fall and... of the RV in America
Acknowledgments
Index