In the industrialized West, cars are considered an essential part of everyday life. Their dominance is underpinned by the challenges of managing complex, geographically stretched daily routines. Drivers' emotional and embodied relationships with automobiles also help to explain why car cultures are difficult to disrupt. This article foregrounds ethnic diversity to complicate notions of a "love affair" with the car. We report on the mobilities of fourteen Chinese migrants living in Sydney, Australia-many of whom described embodied dispositions against the car, influenced by their life histories. Their emotional responses to cars and driving, shaped by transport norms and infrastructures in their places of origin, ranged from pragmatism and ambivalence to fear and hostility. The lived experiences of these migrants show that multiple cultures of mobility coexist, even in ostensibly car-dependent societies. Migrants' life histories and contemporary practices provide an opportunity to reflect on fissures in the logic of automobility.
Funding
Sustainability and climate change adaptation: unlocking the potential of ethnic diversity
Kerr, S., Klocker, N. & Waitt, G. (2018). Diverse Driving Emotions: Exploring Chinese Migrants' Mobilities in a Car-Dependent City. Transfers-interdisciplinary Journal Of Mobility Studies, 8 (2), 23-43.