鈥榃omen Behind the Wheel鈥 punctures the idea that driving meant freedom
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Cars loomed large in Nancy Nichols鈥 childhood. She grew up in the 1960s and 鈥70s in Waukegan, Illinois, the daughter of a used-car salesman who apparently fit the worst stereotypes associated with his profession.
鈥淢y father lied about everything, consistently, reflexively, whether his lies served a purpose or not,鈥 Nichols recalls in 鈥淲omen Behind the Wheel: An Unexpected and Personal History of the Car.鈥 The book is a spirited exploration of the effects of the automobile on American women. It鈥檚 grounded in historical research and cultural analysis, but the journalist鈥檚 own life story drives the narrative.
The author鈥檚 parents separated when Nichols was 5, and her mother died a few years later. From that time on, she lived alone with her unstable father, in a house whose lawn was littered with cars in various states of disrepair and whose furniture was piled with spare parts. Getting a driver鈥檚 license allowed her to escape a chaotic home life. 鈥淚s it an overstatement to say I didn鈥檛 come alive again until I could drive?鈥 she muses. 鈥淧robably, but that鈥檚 how I remember it.鈥澛
With freedom came responsibility. As a driver, Nichols was obligated to run errands and to get a job to help support her small household. Despite the fact that she was only a teenager, she sees her experience as consistent with a broader pattern. While women were deemed unfit to drive when the car was invented, once they were handed the keys, the expectation was that they would 鈥渦se their automobiles in the service of family.鈥澛
Men, Nichols argues, haven鈥檛 faced the same imperatives. 鈥淔or men the car has always symbolized adventure and escapism,鈥 she writes, 鈥渂ut for women the car likely means a longer to-do list.鈥 The suburbs, she observes, wouldn鈥檛 exist without the automobile. And women鈥檚 lives there have often revolved around food shopping and driving their children to and from school and after-school activities.
The types of cars marketed to women have tended to reinforce their domestic roles: Over the decades, the station wagon and the minivan have been touted for their ease in accommodating children and groceries. Nichols points out, however, that automakers avoid associating any of their products too strongly with female drivers. 鈥淭here is an old adage in Detroit that a woman will buy a man鈥檚 car, but in no instance will a man buy a woman鈥檚 car,鈥 she notes. 聽
鈥淲omen Behind the Wheel鈥 is written with a breezy tone that mostly works. It鈥檚 also timely, as electric and autonomous vehicles are set to bring about great change. Nichols ponders privacy concerns likely to emerge 鈥渨hen your car is essentially one big app sending data to unknown parties about your whereabouts and habits.鈥 And she worries about the ways this surveillance might affect women, citing, as examples, data revealing an illegal trip across state lines to an abortion clinic or an abusive partner being able to track a woman鈥檚 location through her car.
Noting female suburbanites鈥 responsibility for shopping and chauffeuring, the author writes that 鈥渢he car enslaved women even as it liberated them.鈥 At times throughout the book, she captures some of the joy that comes with being in the driver鈥檚 seat. But the disturbing future scenarios that conclude the book are consistent with Nichols鈥 conflicted view of the automobile鈥檚 effects on women.