páginas de pablo gil gonzález / Automoción [23] 2001
FREEDOM AND POSTWAR MOBILITY: [1946-1958]
The rocky homecoming of American World War II veterans enriched American
motorcycle mythology. Their wartime world fostered a camaraderie among motorcycle
platoons that would form the root of motorcycle gangs like Marlon Brando's in the
film The Wild One (1954). The juiced-up Army bike with the everyman-sounding moniker
"Bob-Job," became the vehicle for their flight. Combat veterans roamed
America's roads in cohesive groups; the forerunners of the maligned American motorcycle
gang, these vets did Easy Rider long before Hollywood did. The counterpoint to the
"Bob-Job" was the Vespa: Brando in leather against Audrey Hepburn in a
billowing skirt in Roman Holiday (1953). Born of the need for cheap personal transportation
in the chaos of postwar Italy, the Vespa zipped into the collective cultural psyche.
Socially acceptable yet still romantic, it epitomized suburbia's embrace of the motorbike. In this context, the GIs' uncomfortable homecoming became all the more jarring, suburbanization all the more unavoidable, and social rebellion all the more predictable. The motorcycle became the vehicle for all shades of rebellion--from the vigilantism of hardcore biker gangs to the softer, almost sexy poses of suburban housewives daring to mimic Hollywood starlets. Fine machine--from dainty Vespas to daunting Harleys--became the metaphor on which America would ride into one of the most tumultuous eras the young country had ever known. The anxieties of postwar society forecast the chaos of the 1960s, and the motorcycle became the cultural icon that tracked the societal meltdown. |