
It8217;s summertime, and the gas prices are sky high.
The Travel Industry Association is forecasting only a slight 1 per cent decline in the number of vacations Americans will take this summer as compared to last. But not everyone is so sanguine about the future of American mobility. Some oil industry experts are predicting an end to the classic summer road trip.
That would be a terrible shame. Not just because it8217;d be a loss of a phenomenal form of recreation, but because taking to the open road has long been Americans8217; route to discovering not only their country but themselves.
Our love of the road is not simply a product of the explosion in automobile ownership in the post-World War II era. And its attendant literary genre didn8217;t begin 8212; or end 8212; with Jack Kerouac8217;s 1951 Beat classic, On the Road. Way back in 1900, Walt Whitman published his poem, 8216;The Song of the Open Road,8217; in 8216;Leaves of Grass.8217; In it, he explores the almighty American itch to venture forth. From this hour, freedom!/ From this hour I ordain myself loos8217;d of limits and imaginary lines,/ Going where I list, my own master, total and absolute,/ Listening to others, and considering well what they say,/ Pausing, searching, receiving, contemplating,/ Gently, but with undeniable will, divesting myself of the holds that would hold me.
And wasn8217;t that the very desire that launched the great American Experiment in the first place 8212; to divest ourselves of whatever held us? At the very least, from the founding of the first colonies on the Eastern Seaboard, we like to think that we8217;ve never ceased running from hidebound convention.
As early as the 1780s, Ben Franklin suggested that the westward movement of the population would save Americans from the corrosive remnants of European tradition that had taken hold on the East Coast. From the late 1830s, Horace Greeley began urging the downtrodden to 8220;Go West, young man!8221; to find fortune. Until it was deemed closed in the late 19th century, the Western frontier was the mythic national safety valve that promised to save us from poverty, stasis and our worst mistakes.
The contemporary road trip takes the memory of all that, adds faster transportation and a lot of nostalgia. It simultaneously represents two essential 8212; and competing 8212; facets of American life. On one hand, taking to the road is a metaphor for rejecting conformity, searching for the new. It8217;s also a way 8216;home.8217;
In fact, self-discovery has been a prominent theme in so many road narratives. Think of Robert M. Pirsig8217;s 1974 bestseller, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, a road book punctuated by philosophical musings on life. Then there8217;s William Saroyan8217;s famous observation that 8220;psychiatry of one sort or another is what happens on a long drive.8221;
Through the years, the road trip has also become something of a rite of passage. In 1988, the summer before my senior year of college, I joined three buddies on a 10-day journey from Berkeley to Princeton. We piled into a four-door, six-cylinder 1958 baby blue Ford Custom, the blue-collar version of the Fairlane. We didn8217;t quite wander aimlessly, but almost.
I remember lying in the road in Death Valley, looking up at the stars. I also remember calling my big brother on Day Five to complain that I couldn8217;t stand being cramped up in a car with those guys for one more day.
The 2008 road-trip-not-taken will undoubtedly be a result of the high cost of a barrel of light sweet crude this summer. Then again, the car isn8217;t the only way to travel, and gasoline isn8217;t the only fuel. Maybe another national stereotype 8212; American ingenuity 8212; will get us all back on the road, where we belong. In Whitman8217;s words: The road is before us 8230;/ Be not detained.