Lowriders: Cruising the Color Line

abstract: This dissertation examines the use of color in lowrider car customizations. It studies the relationships among car owners, car painters, and car clubs in the process of selection, and manipulation of color. This research studies how color is constructed as an element for individual and com...

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Other Authors: Calvo-Quiros, William A. (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9378
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-93782018-06-22T03:02:00Z Lowriders: Cruising the Color Line abstract: This dissertation examines the use of color in lowrider car customizations. It studies the relationships among car owners, car painters, and car clubs in the process of selection, and manipulation of color. This research studies how color is constructed as an element for individual and community differentiation. Also included is the examination of the influence of car clubs in the design process, the understanding of color by car painters and car owners, and the cultural values associated with color in this community. This research argues that through the use, manipulation, and implementation of color as a visual/design element, lowriders challenge, transgress, and resist the preconceived notions of space, aesthetic hegemony, and social disparity they experience. In this case, color as a cultural expression, becomes a pivotal element to narrate and retell their stories of struggle and endurance, as well as to envision a different world. This research frames Chicana/o vernacular production, and color use as being central to the borderland experience of this community. Finally, this research follows the discourse of taste, as this concept has been used to create social categories of exotic otherness and the perpetuation of specific aesthetic epistemologies. In this context, it presents lowriders as expression of a Chicana/o network of vernacular border knowledge. This dissertation concludes by framing the Low n' Slow movement, in the context of healing and emancipating practices enacted by subjugated communities in order to survive, give sense to their reality, and to envision a more egalitarian world. Dissertation/Thesis Calvo-Quiros, William A. (Author) Giard, Jacques (Advisor) Boradkar, Prasad (Committee member) Foster, David William (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Design Cultural Anthropology Folklore Alternative Epistemologies Chicano Color Eurocentrism Lowriders Rasquache eng 351 pages Ph.D. Environmental Design and Planning 2011 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9378 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2011
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Design
Cultural Anthropology
Folklore
Alternative Epistemologies
Chicano
Color
Eurocentrism
Lowriders
Rasquache
spellingShingle Design
Cultural Anthropology
Folklore
Alternative Epistemologies
Chicano
Color
Eurocentrism
Lowriders
Rasquache
Lowriders: Cruising the Color Line
description abstract: This dissertation examines the use of color in lowrider car customizations. It studies the relationships among car owners, car painters, and car clubs in the process of selection, and manipulation of color. This research studies how color is constructed as an element for individual and community differentiation. Also included is the examination of the influence of car clubs in the design process, the understanding of color by car painters and car owners, and the cultural values associated with color in this community. This research argues that through the use, manipulation, and implementation of color as a visual/design element, lowriders challenge, transgress, and resist the preconceived notions of space, aesthetic hegemony, and social disparity they experience. In this case, color as a cultural expression, becomes a pivotal element to narrate and retell their stories of struggle and endurance, as well as to envision a different world. This research frames Chicana/o vernacular production, and color use as being central to the borderland experience of this community. Finally, this research follows the discourse of taste, as this concept has been used to create social categories of exotic otherness and the perpetuation of specific aesthetic epistemologies. In this context, it presents lowriders as expression of a Chicana/o network of vernacular border knowledge. This dissertation concludes by framing the Low n' Slow movement, in the context of healing and emancipating practices enacted by subjugated communities in order to survive, give sense to their reality, and to envision a more egalitarian world. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Environmental Design and Planning 2011
author2 Calvo-Quiros, William A. (Author)
author_facet Calvo-Quiros, William A. (Author)
title Lowriders: Cruising the Color Line
title_short Lowriders: Cruising the Color Line
title_full Lowriders: Cruising the Color Line
title_fullStr Lowriders: Cruising the Color Line
title_full_unstemmed Lowriders: Cruising the Color Line
title_sort lowriders: cruising the color line
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9378
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