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Power Lines - Phoenix and the Making of the Modern Southwest (Paperback)
Loot Price: R829
Discovery Miles 8 290
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Power Lines - Phoenix and the Making of the Modern Southwest (Paperback)
Series: Politics and Society in Modern America
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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In 1940, Phoenix was a small, agricultural city of sixty-five
thousand, and the Navajo Reservation was an open landscape of
scattered sheepherders. Forty years later, Phoenix had blossomed
into a metropolis of 1.5 million people and the territory of the
Navajo Nation was home to two of the largest strip mines in the
world. Five coal-burning power plants surrounded the reservation,
generating electricity for export to Phoenix, Los Angeles, and
other cities. Exploring the postwar developments of these two very
different landscapes, Power Lines tells the story of the
far-reaching environmental and social inequalities of metropolitan
growth, and the roots of the contemporary coal-fueled climate
change crisis. Andrew Needham explains how inexpensive electricity
became a requirement for modern life in Phoenix--driving assembly
lines and cooling the oppressive heat. Navajo officials initially
hoped energy development would improve their lands too, but as ash
piles marked their landscape, air pollution filled the skies, and
almost half of Navajo households remained without electricity, many
Navajos came to view power lines as a sign of their subordination
in the Southwest. Drawing together urban, environmental, and
American Indian history, Needham demonstrates how power lines
created unequal connections between distant landscapes and how
environmental changes associated with suburbanization reached far
beyond the metropolitan frontier. Needham also offers a new account
of postwar inequality, arguing that residents of the metropolitan
periphery suffered similar patterns of marginalization as those
faced in America's inner cities. Telling how coal from Indian lands
became the fuel of modernity in the Southwest, Power Lines explores
the dramatic effects that this energy system has had on the people
and environment of the region.
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