Route 66 As American History?
As such there is little wrong with any of that. Certainly these titles are very user friendly items which non historians and historians alike can use to collect basic information about Route 66. Some of the more thoughtful works do a workman-like job of trying to place Route 66 into the environment through which it passes, and make linkages to local and national historical events. What these works have left unanswered is whether a more thoughtful historical analysis of Route 66 is possible- or perhaps even desirable. The works to date for the most part do not position themselves as historical works generally, in other words these works largely present themselves for what they are- popular works on a specialized topic of interest for a wide variety of readers. Often these works reflect the specialized needs and interests of their authors, and not necessarily those of the researcher at large.
There are questions we must ask about our (collective) relationship with Route 66(1). Was Route 66 simply a product of technology? Was it a bellwether of the future? A symbol of American culture? Was it local history? Was it American History? The problem with the contemporary Route 66 writing and scholarship situation isn't simply one of ill defined books wherein the authors fail to follow through on their topic. Rather, all of these writers struggled with their topics and to some extent come to grips with it- that much is clear, and the results speak for themselves. Despite 80 book titles, one magazine title, and countless articles in magazines and newspapers coming out over the last 15 years or so, the topic is yet to really be adequately covered. The veritable explosion of Route 66 web sites confuses the issue further. There are literally thousands of Web sites dealing with Route 66, some are from enthusiasts, and travelers, some are scholarly and historical, many clue in on "selling" Route 66, but many draw their support and information from these print titles, and further enforce that particular reflection of Route 66 scholarship and publishing. At least for Arizona based publications and web sites, we can almost tick off in order those places and people that have to be included in those works.
The fact is that virtually no new information regarding Route 66 has been produced (despite the swell in titles) demonstrating a clear cut need for a new way to assess what Route 66 was and is today. One method of looking at Route 66 (which probably makes a great deal of sense) is to take a more historically oriented approach that may move our understanding of Route 66 forward and provide some foundation for scholarship and research about Route 66. There are even some good foundations to start with. Within the body of material published on Route 66 there are some notable exceptions which do not generally fit into the popular cultural or historical works category. First on this list are the more specialized yet still "popular" works. Quinta Scott's work entitled "Along Route 66" certainly fall's into this category (2). Scott's book is an architectural study of buildings along Route 66. As such it is a well defined work examining early 20th century roadside architecture, within the geographical limit of Route 66. Many of the federal and state publications on Route 66 also fall generally into this category. They have clear definition of purpose, and are limited to the highway's geography. The second category of Route 66 works which fall beyond the popular marker are the academic pieces written over the last twenty years supporting graduate research (3). Beyond these however, one finds a mixture of what I have listed above- an array of works with relatively shallow historical content Route 66.
Of late there have been a few articles, and now a book (4) which may seem to indicate one kind of trend. The authors of these works seem to attempt to embrace a more academic stance by trying to strip the romance from the road by showing the graphic reality of current or past Route 66 conditions, or reveal the darker aspects of the local histories of places along the road. Sub-currents within these works include serious topics and issues including crime, poverty, racism, corruption, anti environmentalism, and more. These works may simply be attempting to "unpopularize" Route 66, or with the inclusion of darker historical themes, link Route 66 to broader events. The obvious question at this point is whether the non-romantic look at past or current conditions that these unflinching works embrace comprise an improvement over current Route 66 study, and if so, will this lead to the historical works we may be seeking, or is this some other sort of phenomenon?
History?
There
are many views on just what constitutes "History". Essentially History
is
the recorded past, and obviously there are many factors that affect
just
what gets incorporated into a culture's accepted historical record. If
we
reflect upon our own collective academic past, we usually find that
studies
in History were limited to what we call today "survey" classes or
books.
These classes or books feature broad strokes of history, covering large
blocks
of time, or incorporating large geographic space. Such history provides
a
good foundation from which the user can grasp the basic concepts of the
past,
and launch into deeper studies for more detailed evaluation of shorter
time
frames, tighter geographic areas, or even biographical looks at
individuals
influential in that phase of the historical continuum.
History can be further developed and explored to envelope counter or alternative views. Quite often history of this type incorporates minority views or perspectives, revisionist outlooks, or even some sort of post-modern interpretation. History, however, is still shaped by the culture of those who write it and who or what it is about. This means is that "official" or accepted history (whether of a town, country, corporation, or even an individual) still must meet the limits of acceptability on the part of the whole (that is who will read and make use of this history). A case in point might be the rejection of Edmund Morris' recent work entitled Dutch : a Memoir of Ronald Reagan (5). Morris' prior works were largely accepted as solid scholarship, yet by novelizing the life of Reagan, and inserting the author as a character into the story, Morris' work was largely rejected as not being historically valid. In fact the biography's construction is what the book is remembered for, not what it concluded about its subject.
All of this implies that History is not fixed. By its own nature History does change based upon the perspectives of new authors, new studies and information synthesis, the perspective developed with the passage of time, as well as discovery of new evidence and material.
Route
66 History
Where
does Route 66 fit in the historical continuum? The first initial
hurdle
is to determine whether a subject like Route 66 is really a historical
topic
(as many Historians might argue against, classifying it instead as an
icon
of American or popular culture). "Popular" topics are often simply not
seen
as historically valid topics, yet as we know popular culture can
uniquely
define history as well as many other more "classic" tools. The body of
Route
66 material at hand has produced a good ground work for future
publications,
especially with the volume of interview material already collected. If
we
examine Route 66 in historical terms, that is to say as a
chronological,
place driven entity, the history of Route 66 would begin to form up
around
some of the following broad topics:
Certainly Route 66 does embody something uniquely American in nature. It may be that this alone is the reason why it has been difficult for authors and writers to grasp and deal with this topic. The argument against the creation of a Route 66 historiography is strong. This is an entity less than a century old (and therefore hardly historic in some circles), and the hesitancy to to write the road's history is understandable given that it continues to exist in many place, and is on the verge of another sort of existence as a sanctioned "Historic Corridor".
It may
well be that for now, we are more comfortable in embracing Route 66 as
some
sort of cultural icon, than in producing (and reading and evaluating)
scholarly
works about the old road. It is probable that even if a more
historical
methodology is not embraced by future writers of Route 66, that they
will
have to somehow alter the trends that Route 66 publication currently
stay
with. Certainly the popular experiential allure of Route 66 will always
inspire
writers to try to explain that aspect of the road, but without some
sort
of historical foundation, these become experiences in a vacuum.