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Route 66 and the Formation of a National Cultural Icon

Mother Road to Mythic American Byway
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During the twentieth century, Route 66 became a national icon and was commonly associated with classic American cuisine, road trips, and the golden age of postwar American prosperity. This conception, however, is mythic. The reality of Route 66 travel was congestion, danger, and racism. Route 66 and the Formation of a National Cultural Icon: Mother Road to Mythic American Byway by Daniel Milowski explores the divergence between Route 66 myth and reality and provides a critical examination of the cultural origins of the Route 66 myth and the road's historical role in community development in the American West. Milowski discusses how Route 66 became so clogged with traffic in the 1960s that it garnered the dark nickname "Bloody 66" due to the high volume of serious traffic accidents. He examines rampant racism at travel businesses and racialized policing in many towns along the highway. Finally, he contrasts this with the myth of Route 66 which incorporates aspects of cultural nostalgia for supposedly simpler times while representing Route 66 as emblematic of a past "more authentic America." Milowski demonstrates that the history of Route 66 and its towns is deeper and more nuanced than the Route 66 myth allows.
Daniel Milowski is professor of American history at Arizona State University and Chandler-Gilbert Community College.
List of Figures Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1: Before Route 66 Chapter 2: Dirt Track to Asphalt Ribbon: Early Route 66 Chapter 3: America's Main Street to Byway: Route 66 Postwar Chapter 4: Route 66 Requiem Conclusion Bibliography About the Author
Few American roads conjure as much nostalgia as Route 66, particularly the remaining well-preserved sections in Arizona. But as Daniel Milowski shows in this excellent study, the tourist promise of 1950s Americana obscures a much more interesting history of an ever-changing transportation corridor and the communities along it. Route 66 and the Formation of a National Cultural Icon is essential reading for those who are interested in the real story, not the kitschy neon myth. -- Paul S. Sutter, University of Colorado Boulder
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