Speed Capital: Indianapolis Auto Racing and the Making of Modern America
Brian M. Ingrassia
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Speed Capital: Indianapolis Auto Racing and the Making of Modern America
Brian M. Ingrassia
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Brian M. Ingrassia
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Published:
February 2024
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Ingrassia, Brian M., ' Speed Carnivals: Conducting the Midway of a Motor Empire', Speed Capital: Indianapolis Auto Racing and the Making of Modern America (2024; online edn, Illinois Scholarship Online), https://doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252045554.003.0004, accessed 7 Oct. 2024.
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Abstract
This chapter explores the first two 500-mile races, in 1911 and 1912, alongside Carl Fisher’s other space-annihilating enterprises, especially the Lincoln and Dixie Highways. The Indianapolis Motor Speedway’s grandstands were a place for pop-culture consumerism and for fostering motor-sport celebrity—a celebrity based on a masculinity that excluded female drivers. It was also at this time that Fisher started building suburban enclaves based on automobility, industry, and leisure, including Speedway City, Indiana, and Miami Beach, Florida.
Keywords: Carl Graham Fisher, Indianapolis, celebrity, masculinity, 500-mile race, grandstands, Lincoln Highway, Dixie Highway, Speedway City, Miami Beach
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