East Mojave Desert Project 2004
Contexts for the Desert 14:
Interstate Desert
old sign at Goffs, CA; rest stop on I-40, west of Ludlow, CA; down the hill on I-15 towards state line at Primm, NV
"Tuesday, 9:00 AM . . . Now, sitting in 'Wild Bill's Cafe'
on the edge of Las Vegas, I saw it all very clearly. There
is only one road to L.A. — U.S. Interstate 15, a straight run
with no backroads or alternate routes, just a flat-out high-speed burn
through Baker and Barstow and Berdoo then onto the Hollywood Freeway
straight into frantic oblivion: safety, obscurity, just another
freak in the Freak Kingdom."
If McLuhan is right, this technology which is not obsolete,
the interstate highway system, should be invisible to us.
I for one find it hard to look at and see. Major traffic jams or fiery crashes
make it temporarily visible, like paint thrown on an invisible man.
I remember an episode of the old 1950s TV show The Twilight Zone,
in which a pioneer crossing the desert in the 1850s comes over a rise and
sees an interstate, and is almost run over by an 18-wheeler as he marvels at
the asphalt. By assuming this alien, time-traveler's point of view,
I begin to make freeways visible to me.
Last update 12:39 PM Fri. 27-Feb-2004 by ABS.
© 2004 Alan B. Scrivener