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California is an infamously tough place to be poor: home to about
half of the entire nation's homeless population, burdened by
staggering home prices and unsustainable rental rates, California
is a state in crisis. But it wasn't always that way, as
prize-winning historian Josh Sides reveals in Backcountry Ghosts.
In 1862 President Abraham Lincoln signed the Homestead Act, the
most ambitious and sweeping social policy in the history of the
United States. In the Golden State more than a hundred thousand
people filed homesteading claims between 1863 and the late 1930s.
More than sixty thousand Californians succeeded, claiming about ten
million acres. In Backcountry Ghosts Josh Sides tells the histories
of these Californian homesteaders, their toil and enormous
patience, successes and failures, doggedness in the face of natural
elements and disasters, and resolve to defend hard-earned land for
themselves and their children. While some of these homesteaders
were fulfilling the American Dream-that all Americans should have
the opportunity to own land regardless of their background or
station-others used the Homestead Act to add to already vast
landholdings or control water or mineral rights. Sides recovers the
fascinating stories of individual homesteaders in California, both
those who succeeded and those who did not, and the ways they shaped
the future of California and the American West. Backcountry Ghosts
reveals the dangers of American dreaming in a state still reeling
from the ambitions that led to the Great Recession.
In 1913 the San Francisco Bulletin published a
serialized, ghostwritten memoir of a prostitute who went by the
moniker Alice Smith. “A Voice from the Underworld” detailed
Alice's humble Midwestern upbringing and her struggle to find
aboveboard work, and candidly related the harrowing events she
endured after entering “the life.” While prostitute narratives
had been published before, never had they been as frank in their
discussion of the underworld, including topics such as abortion,
police corruption, and the unwritten laws of the brothel.
Throughout the series, Alice strongly criticized the society that
failed her and so many other women, but, just as acutely, she
longed to be welcomed back from the margins. The response to
Alice's story was unprecedented: four thousand letters poured into
the Bulletin, many of which were written by other
prostitutes ready to share their own stories; and it inspired what
may have been the first sex worker rights protest in modern
history. For the first time in print since 1913, Alice:
Memoirs of a Barbary Coast Prostitute presents the memoirs of
Alice Smith and a selection of letters responding to her story. An
introduction contextualizes “A Voice from the Underworld” amid
Progressive Era sensationalistic journalism and shifting ideas of
gender roles, and reveals themes in Alice's story that extend to
issues facing sex workers today.
Since the 1960s, San Francisco has been America's capital of sexual
libertinism and a potent symbol in its culture wars. In this highly
original book, Josh Sides explains how this happened, unearthing
long-forgotten stories of the city's sexual revolutionaries, as
well as the legions of longtime San Franciscans who tried to
protect their vision of a moral metropolis. Erotic dancers,
prostitutes, birth control advocates, pornographers, free lovers,
and gay libbers transformed San Francisco's political landscape and
its neighborhoods in ways seldom appreciated. But as sex radicals
became more visible in the public spaces of the city, many San
Franciscans reacted violently. The assassinations of Mayor George
Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk were but the most brazen acts in
a city caught up in a battle over morality, a battle that often
spilled over onto sidewalk violence against free-love hippies, gays
and lesbians. It was a moral conflict exploited by Richard Nixon
and the Republican Party, and seized by Hollywood as a flamboyant
backdrop for a raft of vigilante movies, most notably the Dirty
Harry series set in San Francisco. Perhaps most important, Josh
Sides illuminates the many ways that human desire has shaped the
destiny of postwar San Francisco-and much of postwar urban America.
Indeed, he shows that one cannot understand the American city-nor
modern America politics-without taking into account both the real
and the imagined transformation of our urban areas into
repositories of sexual desire.
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Post-Ghetto (Hardcover)
Josh Sides; Contributions by Jake Alimahomed-Wilson, Andrea Asuma, Edna Bonacich, Robert Gottlieb, …
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R2,544
Discovery Miles 25 440
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Is South Los Angeles on the mend? How is it combating the blight of
crime, gang violence, high unemployment, and dire poverty? In
provocative essays, the contributing authors to "Post-Ghetto"
address these questions by pointing out robust signs of hope for
the area's residents--an increase in corporate retail investment, a
decrease in homicides, a proliferation of nonprofit service
providers, a paradigm shift in violence- and gang-prevention
programs, and progress toward a strengthened, more racially
integrated labor movement. By charting the connections between
public policy and the health of a community, the authors offer
innovative ideas and visionary strategies for further urban renewal
and remediation. Contributors: Jake Alimahomed-Wilson, Andrea
Azuma, Edna Bonacich, Robert Gottlieb, Karen M. Hennigan, Jorge N.
Leal, Jill Leovy, Cheryl Maxson, Scott Saul, David C. Sloane, Mark
Vallianatos, Danny Widener, Natale Zappia
In 1964 an Urban League survey ranked Los Angeles as the most
desirable city for African Americans to live in. In 1965 the city
burst into flames during one of the worst race riots in the
nation's history. How the city came to such a pass--embodying both
the best and worst of what urban America offered black migrants
from the South--is the story told for the first time in this
history of modern black Los Angeles. A clear-eyed and compelling
look at black struggles for equality in L.A.'s neighborhoods,
schools, and workplaces from the Great Depression to our day, "L.A.
City Limits "critically refocuses the ongoing debate about the
origins of America's racial and urban crisis.
Challenging previous analysts' near-exclusive focus on northern
"rust-belt" cities devastated by de-industrialization, Josh Sides
asserts that the cities to which black southerners migrated
profoundly affected how they fared. He shows how L.A.'s diverse
racial composition, dispersive geography, and dynamic postwar
economy often created opportunities--and limits--quite different
from those encountered by blacks in the urban North.
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