Five fires : race, catastrophe, and the shaping of California

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Bibliographic Information

Five fires : race, catastrophe, and the shaping of California

David Wyatt

Addison-Wesley Pub. Co., c1997

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Note

Bibliography: p. 263-279

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Fire is a phenomenon both destructive and transforming, its story found in the ruins it leaves behind as well as the survivors that rise from its ashes. In this wholly original study, cultural historian and critic David Wyatt uses the story of fire to tell the story of California. Wyatt focuses this catastrophic history of his native state on five events that swept through California, altering its physical and political landscape and the way both were represented in art and literature.Wyatt begins with the accidental importation and spread of the wild oat in the 1770s, a process that had its human counterpart in the Spanish invaders. He then explores the impact of four other significant events: the Gold Rush, the 1906 earthquake and fire, the postWorld War II defense-industry boom, and the fire of race that erupted in Watts in 1965. This fifth fire, Wyatt claims, has burned all throughout Californias history, and he artfully examines its effects on both the Chinese immmigration experience and the internment of Japanese Americans in World War II. With an energetic style, Wyatt shows how all of these events were recorded and responded to in the works of the imagination that have shaped our collective understanding of the Golden State, from the writings of Raymond Chandler and Amy Tan, to the photography of Ansel Adams and the films of Roman Polanski. Five Fires is a provocative and highly entertaining retelling of California history that will prove an important contribution to the history of American culture.

Table of Contents

  • Prologue
  • The Wild Oat: The Spanish and American Conquests
  • The Gold Rush: Men Without Women
  • Exclusion, the Chinese, and the Daughters Arrival
  • The San Francisco Earthquake and Fire: The Culture of Spectacle
  • The Politics of Water: The Shift South
  • World War II: Los Angeles and the Production of Anger
  • Relocation, the Japanese, and the Twice Divorced
  • From Watts to South Central: Internalizing the Fire
  • Epilogue.

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