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Josef Taalbi. Photo

Josef Taalbi

Senior lecturer

Josef Taalbi. Photo

On the gendering of the early American electric car

Author

  • Josef Taalbi

Summary, in English

The role of gender relations in shaping technological transitions is widely acknowledged but remains understudied. This study uses historical data to analyze the gendering of early 20th century American cars and its impact. Previous research has argued that early electric vehicles were construed as a women's car, contributing to its demise. Other work has questioned to what extent automotive preferences were gendered. The results of this study suggest a partially new interpretation. Early advertisements for electrics targeted business and family men, challenging the view of cars as "adventure machines". However, as electrics declined, producers turned to feminization to survive competition from gasoline cars, a response to declining market shares, rather than the opposite. This made electric cars part of a conservative separate spheres gender ideology. The results stress the co-construction of gender and technology and how gendering processes can create powerful lock-in effects and barriers to (sustainability) transitions.

Department/s

  • Department of Economic History
  • Sustainability transformations over time and space

Publishing year

2025

Language

English

Publication/Series

Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions

Volume

54

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Economic History
  • Gender Studies

Keywords

  • Gender
  • Electric vehicles
  • US
  • Automobiles
  • Social shaping of technology

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 2210-4224