AdornoT. (1972) ‘Fetish character in music and regressive listening’ in AratoA. and GebhardtE. (eds) The Essential Frankfurt School Reader. New York: Continuum.
3.
AugéM. (1995) Non-Places.London: Verso.
4.
BachmairB. (1991) ‘From the motor-car to television: Cultural-historical arguments on the meaning of mobility for communication’Media, Culture and Society, 13: 521–33.
5.
BallardJ. G. (1995) Crash. London: Vintage.
6.
BaumanZ. (1987) Legislators and Interpreters. Cambridge: Polity.
7.
BodenD. and MolotchH. (1994) ‘The compulsion to proximity’ in FriedlandR. and BodenD. (eds) Now/Here. Time, Space and Modernity. Berkeley: University of California Press.
8.
BullM. (2004) ‘Soundscapes of the car: A critical study of automobile habitation’Theory, Culture and Society, 21: 243–59.
9.
CliffordJ. (1997) Routes.Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
10.
EyermanR. and LöfgrenO. (1995) ‘Romancing the road: Road movies and images of mobility’Theory, Culture and Society, 12: 53–79.
11.
FlinkJ. (1988) The Automobile Age. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
12.
FeatherstoneM.ThriftN. and UrryJ. (eds) (2004) ‘Automobilities’ Special Issue of Theory, Culture and Society. 21.
13.
FreundP. and MartinG. (1993) The Ecology of the Automobile. Montreal: Black Rose Books.
14.
GiddensA. (1991) Modernity and Self-Identity. Cambridge: Polity.
15.
GrahamS. (ed.) (2004) The Cybercities Reader. London: Routledge.
16.
Graves-BrownP. (1997) ‘From highway to superhighway: The sustainability, symbolism and situated practices of car culture’Social Analysis, 41: 64–75.
17.
HarawayD. (1991) Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature. London: Free Association Books.
18.
HawkenP.LovinsA. and LovinsL.H. (1999) Natural Capitalism. London: Earthscan.
19.
HawkinsR. (1986) ‘A road not taken: Sociology and the neglect of the automobile 1’California Sociologist, 9: 61–79.
KunstlerJ. (1994) The Geography of Nowhere: The Rise and Decline of America's Man-Made Landscape. New York: Touchstone Books.
22.
LightA. (1991) Forever England: Femininity, Literature and Conservatism Between the Wars. London: Routledge.
23.
LiniadoM. (1996) Car Culture and Countryside Change. MSc Dissertation. Geography Department, University of Bristol.
24.
LynchM. (1993) Scientific Practice and Ordinary Action. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
25.
LyndR. and LyndH. (1937) Middletown in Transition. New York: Harvest.
26.
MarshP. and CollettP. (1986) Driving Passion. London: Jonathan Cape.
27.
MeadowsM. and StradlingS. (2000) ‘Are women better drivers than men? Tools for measuring driver behaviour’ in HartleyJ. and BranthwaiteA. (eds) The Applied Psychologist. Milton Keynes: Open University Press.
28.
MichaelM. (1998) ‘Co(a)gency and the car: Attributing agency in the case of the “road rage”’ in BrennaB.LawJ. and MoserI. (eds) Machines, Agency and Desire. Oslo: TMV Skriftserie.
29.
MillerD. (ed.) (2000) Car Culture. Oxford: Berg.
30.
MorrisM. (1988) ‘At Henry Parkes Motel’Cultural Studies, 2: 1–47.
31.
MorseM. (1998) Virtualities: Television, Media Art and Cyberculture. Indiana: Indiana University Press.
32.
O'ConnellS. (1998) The Car in British Society. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
33.
PearceL. (1999) ‘Driving North/Driving South: Reflections upon the Spatial/Temporal Coordinates of “Home”’, Mimeo. Lancaster University.
34.
PinkneyT. (1991) Raymond Williams. Bridgend: Seren Books.
35.
SassenS. (1996) ‘The spatial organization of information industries: Implications for the role of the state’ in MittelmanJ.H. (ed.) Globalization: Critical Reflections. Boulder CO: Lynne Rienner.
36.
ScannellP. (1996) Radio, Television and Modern Life. Oxford: Blackwell.
37.
ShellerM. (2004) ‘Automotive emotions: Feeling the car’Theory, Culture and Society, 21: 221–42.
38.
ShellerM. and UrryJ. (2000) ‘The city and the car’International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 24: 737–57.
UrryJ. (2004) ‘The “system” of automobility’Theory, Culture and Society, 21: 25–40.
44.
US Department of Transportation (1999) ‘Effective Global Transportation in the Twenty First Century: A Vision Document’, ‘One Dot’Working Group on Enabling Research, US Department of Transportation, http://www.volpe.dot.gov/infosrc/strtplns/dot/glbtrn21, accessed 6 April 2005.