Ghost Metropolis: Los Angeles from Clovis to Nixon

Manna From Hell: Petroleum, Militarism, Counterrevolution, and World Wars

For countless millennia, oil lay deep in the Earth.  A curse of great richness, petroleum is satan's sinister gift to humankind: “Manna from Hell.”  Once the rock drills pierce the Earth's shell, oil-- spewing in escape of the hellish pressures of the underworld-- delivers itself into the hands of the instantly-enriched proprietor.  Oil, the entombed remains of ancient living flora and fauna, fueled great fortunes of a few: the transportation revolution; the industrial productivity and warfare of the 20th century; turned nation-states against one another; generated world wars, and in the late 20th century, superceded even the Communist-Capitalist world polarization, with a new one: jihadist Islam versus the West and the very Arab sheikdoms that gave birth to jihad.

Los Angeles has been a mighty metropolis in this era of petroleum.  Lying in abundance beneath the Los Angeles Basin, it became a pillar of Angeleno social and political power.  The autocratic, militaristic, anti-democratic political culture of Los Angeles, drank oil as its lifeblood.  It enriched the oilmen themselves, to be sure: Edward Doheny, who founded the LA and the Mexican oil industries, also became a regional warlord and political corrupter in the US-Mexican Borderlands and the Veracruz-Huasteca region.  J. Paul Getty became, not only very rich, but the richest man in the world by 1970.  He not only co-founded the U.S. Oil industry, but by late 1940s had co-founded the Saudi Arabian oilfields and shaped world oil markets.These two and many others--whose enterprises great and global are traced in this series of narrative essays--were chief architects of the global regime of militarism, counterrevolution, and world wars, protracted cold wars and neo-imperial interventions that have shaped the globe.

Because Los Angeles, the metropolis, played such a major role in the shaping of global regimes in the late 20th century, the Los Angeles component of those developments is crucial to comprehend.  In this series of essays, I travce the emergence of a political culture that historical actors  inscribed into the landscape of Los Angeles, and which becmae the foundation for global eploits and the rise of Richard Nixon.

--Get Nixon in here, follow steve's notes.

This page has paths:

  1. Narrative Paths Phil Ethington
  2. Networks Phil Ethington

Contents of this path:

  1. Manna From Hell: Petroleum and the Inscription of Power
  2. Los Angeles and the Revolutionary Moment of 1911
  3. Los Ángeles contra La Raza Cósmica: The Los Angeles Counterrevolution of the 1920s
  4. Hell’s Angels: Air and Power in a Cinematic Metropolis
  5. Target Tokyo: Los Angeles and Accountability for U.S. War Crimes in Europe and Japan, 1943-1945
  6. Space Station Los Angeles: From Peenemünde to Disneyland to Mars
  7. Richard the 37th
  8. Sympathy for the Devil

This page is referenced by:

This page references: