Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/06/22

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Subject: [Leica] a day at the drag races
From: profmason at yahoo.com (John Mason)
Date: Thu Jun 22 23:20:25 2006

Arche wrote:

> Two questions: how long have you been working on 
> this, and how come we're only seeing such terrific
> stuff now?

Thanks for the kind words.

Going on three and a half years, and I introduced the
project a year or two ago and included the link that's
in my sig.  It takes you to what is, in effect, a
rough draft.

> Man, I'm humbled.

Don't sell yourself short.

> One quibble: in my experience, the majoriy of kids
> laying claim to being 'white trash' are doing so 
> out of pride of position as economic and social 
> underdogs, not from a racist motivation.

I agree and hope I didn't give the wrong impression. 
The people in my photos wearing the white trash and
redneck t-shirts are very far from being racists.  I
know this from direct personal experience.

On the other hand--and this is the sort of thing that
makes life interesting--similar people wearing similar
t-shirts have made me feel unwelcome at stock car
races, including stock car races held on the circle
track at the same racing facility as the drag strip in
the photos.

> My half-baked take (this has what? 4-5 days thought 
> behind it?) on why there are more blacks in drag 
> racing has to do with the nature of the competition.

> Drag racing does not invite the possibility of an 
> escalating physical confrontation, the way stockcar 
> racing can and often does.

I agree with this, too.  It's an important part of the
puzzle.

The cultures of the two sports matter as well. 

Stock car racing was born in the South.  It's long
been a central part of white, southern, working class
and middle class identity in a way that drag racing is
not.

Organized drag racing was born in southern California,
just before and after WWII.  White southerners never
claimed it as their own, as they have stock car
racing.  Originating, as it did, in urban southern
California, drag racing wasn't particularly concerned
with policing racial boundaries.  I don't know if the
white drag racers of the '40s and early '50s actually
welcomed blacks and Latinos, but it's clear that they
didn't drive them away.

Thanks, again, Arche.

--John

PS  In case anyone's wondering, Arche and I are
ignoring open wheel racing because the financial entry
barriers are so high.  We're ignoring sports car
racing for the same reason and because Americans only
paid attention to it, in large numbers, for a brief
period in the '60s and '70s when Follmer, Donohue, and
Posey were racing Mustangs, Camaros, and Challengers. 
We're ignoring rallying because...  Well, I certainly
don't have to explain that.


J Mason
Charlottesville, Virginia

DEMOCRACY OF SPEED, a Photo Documentary Project:
http://www.people.virginia.edu/~ds8s/john-m/john-m.html

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Replies: Reply from ricc at mindspring.com (Ric Carter) ([Leica] a day at the drag races)