In the style of literary nonfiction, I hope to argue how a Pan Am advertisement describes an emotional history of the time and, subsequently, a representation of Miami. This ad will shape the personal portion of the essay in the same way Ayaz did for Kumar's "Flight." A close reading of an ad helps the various analyses for Pan Am and its ties to Miami. Having visited Special Collections in the University of Miami, I did not find many ads trying to get travelers to visit Miami specifically but Florida. Miami's present state must have started with the beginnings of the commercial airline industry. Its port and gateway to Latin/South America have roots in Pan Am. Pan Am's ads may explain Miami's uniqueness in its balance of reality versus spectacle, the predominance of foreign banks and markets, and its racial/class tensions. Does Pan Am's larger role as a world airline indirectly symbolize Miami?
William E. Brown Jr. states, "Pan Am would help take the world to Miami, and would do so on time." ("Pan Am: Wings to the World," 145). Is there any validity to this statement?
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