Ghost Metropolis: Los Angeles from Clovis to Nixon

Ghost Metropolis: Los Angeles from the Clovis Conquest to the Nixon Tyranny

People make history as they make places that shape the future. Our present is encompassed by the ghostly presence of the past. Human actions inscribed as regions accumulate and project beyond the deaths each generation.  Acts of our ancestors haunt every landscape.

Past Angelenos inscribed their labors into the landscape: into the streets and structures and institutions of power. They also inscribed their lives into documents, ideas, images, laws, lawlessness, and into the hearts and minds of humanity. They left the scene, but their actions, good and ill, live on, haunting every subsequent inhabitant; haunting most everyone on Earth.

Some regions, at rare intervals, erupt with value, endowed with value by geopolitical confluences.  These places attract millions of migrants from regions around the globe, who apply labor and investment capital to produce a burst of creative output, shaking the world with global tides of impact.  There have been many such world-historic capital regions and cities, and many are still among the most powerful nodes on Earth: Damascus, Rome, Beijing, Tokyo, Rome, Berlin, Paris, London, New York, Los Angeles, Shanghai, Hong Kong.  Each of these global cities are deeply regional metropolises that are unique in their historical development and yet also interconnected in global networks.  Among the youngest of global cities is Los Angeles, California, USA.

Ghost Metropolis maps the brith and growth of a global metropolitan region to make the phantoms of its past visible.

Contents of this path:

  1. Preface
  2. Ab Urbe Condita (From the Origins of the City)
  3. Utopian Landscapes and the Intersections of Power
  4. Manna From Hell: Petroleum, Militarism, Counterrevolution, and World Wars
  5. White Shadows: The Erotics, Race, and Power of Global Hollywood
  6. Segregated Diversity: The Geosocial Formation of Social Justice in the Late Twentieth Century
  7. Richard 37th: A Study of Tyranny
  8. Theory and Methods

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