Reader's Guide
The reader is invited to travel through the historical Los Angeles metropolis along multiple paths and networks of textual, visual, and spatial narratives. Ghost Metropolis has a spatial-temporal-textual structure that is modeled on the metropolis itself.
Ghost Metropolis attempts to make the ghostly presence of the past visible, so it literally visualizes the past, as a three-dimensional form of mapping. Those three dimensions are:
1) the linear chronological narrative, recounting actions by actors2) the visual encounter with the past in photographs, graphic arts, and motion pictures3) the cartographic: visualizing the topography of human action.
Each of these dimensions is historical and chronological, but there is no single, privileged timeline or narrative.
Readers may follow many different paths through this work. It can be read chronologically from 13,000 years ago until the present. It can be read by narrative pathways that follow the course of a general area of social and political life. It can be read across subject areas, within the same chronological period. It can also be read via intersections and networks of tags, through and between the textual and visual narratives.
The forty textual essays of Ghost Metropolis are grouped into six thematic narrative paths. Those with a Blue Link are ready for review, because they have a sufficient visual companion narrative built-out.
All essay drafts in their most up-to-date versions are accessible, via the Narrative Essays path.
Principal Narrative Paths (Path Titles in Bold)
1) Ab Urbe Condita (From the Origins of the City)
Regime V: Mexican Latifundia (1822 – 1848)
Regime VI: U.S. Latifundia-Commercial (1848 – 1881)
Regime IX: U.S./Global Networked Neoliberal (1992-Present)
2) Inscribing Los Angeles: Governing, Producing, and Living Landscapes
The Boom of the 1920s: Industrial and Residential Groundwork
From Footpath to Freeway: Circulation Networks
Making Democratic Spaces: A Visual Geography of Southern California Architectural Moderism, 1900s-1960s
Avenue Journey: Central Ave to Watts
Postwar Suburbia: The Commercialization of Metropolitan Space
3) Manna From Hell: Petroleum, Militarism, Counterrevolution, and World Wars
“Doheny El Cruel”: The Chihuahua Connection
Los Ángeles contra La Raza Cósmica: The Los Angeles Counterrevolution of the 1920s
Hell’s Angels: Air and Power in a Cinematic Metropolis
The Furies: Los Angeles Industrial Mass Killing In the Second Word War
4) White Shadows: Power and Passion of Global Hollywood
Ahn Chang-ho and Philip Ahn
White Shadows in the South Seas
Dolores del Río and Maria Rovitz Ramos
Radio City: Cinema’s Sister
5) Richard 37th: Global Regimes of Los Angeles
Sympathy for the Devil
The Jaws of Smilodon, 1992-2010
6) Segregated Diversity: The Political Geography of Race
Placing Segregation: The Race-Ethnic Geography of Municipal Places, 1940-2000
Geopolitical Economy of Whiteness 1940-1990
The Political Geography of Race, 1940s-1990s
The Spacetime Transection: Pico-Whittier, Lakewood-Rosemead, and Sepulveda Blvd.
The location of each essay within these Narrative Paths is its "home position," because I wrote or revised most of them to belong to those series. But most Narrative Essays also belong to other paths or networks, reachable via numerous linkages within this weblike Scalar book.
The Narrative Essays that have have been woven together with a Visual Narrative can be reached via the Reviewer's Page.
This page has tags:
This page references:
- Crossroads of the LA Metropolis: The Four-Level Interchange and Bunker Hill
- Inscribing the Boundaries of Power: The Production of Governing Spaces, 1781-2000
- Love with Strangers: The Los Angeles Counterculture and the Birth of an Art Capital
- Manna From Hell: Petroleum and the Inscription of Power
- Narrative Paths
- Space Station Los Angeles: From Peenemünde to Disneyland to Mars
- Regime VIII: U.S. Military-Industrial (1940-1992)
- Infinite Landscapes of the Motion Picture Industry
- Narratives
- Regime I: Clovis Conquest: First Peoples and Megafaunal Extinction. ~13,000 calendar years Before Present (BP).
- Global Segregation: The Inscription of Racial Injustice from Mombasa to Culver City
- Genres (new)
- Regime II: Arcadia: The Millingstone Era (~10,200 B.P. to 1 Common Era)
- Tarzana of the Apes
- Segregated Diversity: Los Angeles County, 1940-2000
- Spatial Theory
- Richard the 37th
- Regime IV: Spanish Franciscan Theocracy (1769 – 1822)
- Populism and Fascism in 1930s Hollywood
- Regime III: Aztec Aristocracy: 1 CE to 1769
- Regime VII: U.S. Industrial-Imperial/Porfirian Borderland (1881-1940)
- Hollywood’s White Hunters
- Time and Space in Ghost Metropolis
- Methods