Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Coney Island: Cultural History as Gender, Race and Class



By Jaime Roberts
            Coney Island was instrumental in creating a mass American culture of leisure. It was a place for all classes and genders although the upper class didn’t have need for it and often fought for the closure of its parks, “the place was shunned by ultra-respectable New Yorkers.”[1] Coney Island represented all that was vulgar, hedonistic, adventurous and daring.  This however, is exactly what drew massive crowds of poor, working and middle-class Americans, often immigrants, who couldn’t afford to go to the Riviera, but instead would save their pennies to experience the many wonders that were Coney Island. As one observer noted, “Nowhere else in the United States will you see so many races mingle in a common purpose for a common good.”[2]
            Arguably the most important consequence of Coney Island was that it “took America from the Victorian age into the modern world.”[3] It convinced working class Americans that the pursuit of play was a democratic right, not just for the rich, but for everyone, “an absolute necessity for the working world.”[4] Men and women of different ethnicity and lifestyles all mingled together on the beach, in restaurants and enjoying the many other attractions it had to offer.

            What attracted all these people and set Coney Island apart from other amusement parks was the amount of mechanical devices, inventions (It was the birthplace of the hotdog) and the new spectacles all in an urban setting. In its three major parks the average American could enjoy amusement rides, dance halls, gambling, race tracks, carnival games, side shows, music, movies and so much electricity that Coney Island could be seen “thirty miles out to sea.” [5] Of course there was also the beach and bathing houses. Dreamland Park had people brought in from all over the world and their cultures recreated, in a sort of people zoo. Recreations of disasters such as massive fires were played out every day, while huge crowds watched as firemen put them out. Infant incubators, a new technology, were a display that was a huge hit. Coney Island was not just for fun, rather it reflected and perhaps even created changes, in American deportment.
                        A series of misfortunes led to the decline of Coney Island. There were fires, bankruptcy and World War I. America was different, and now as an industrialized and internationally powerful entity, Americans moved on.[6] Today Coney Island still attracts visitors and its influence is represented in many modern leisure activities, such as Disneyland. Much of that dangerous thrill experienced on gravity defying rides and from witnessing disasters can be seen as still being pursued in activities such as bungee jumping or skydiving.
            Changing economic and social conditions [7] brought about by the industrial revolution created changes in American culture. Pursuit of commercial entertainment that appealed to all classes linked Americans together, leaving the Victorian era behind with its emphasis on morality into a more modern era with a focus on pure esthetic pleasure.


[1] Coney Island: A Documentary, Ric Burns.
[2] Ibid
[3] ibid
[4] ibid
[5] Coney Island: A Documentary, Ric Burns.
[6] Ibid
[7] John F.Kasson Amusing the Million: Coney Island at the Turn of the Century (New York: Hill and Wang 1978) ebook.

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