L.A. City Limits: African American Los Angeles from the Great Depression to the Present

(Author)
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Product Details
Price
$38.34
Publisher
University of California Press
Publish Date
Pages
302
Dimensions
6.06 X 8.98 X 0.74 inches | 0.93 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780520248304

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About the Author
Josh Sides is Assistant Professor of History at Cal Poly Pomona.
Reviews
"An exceptional book. . . . [Sides] mixes pioneering research with good writing, sharp analysis and the moving stories of everyday people. His work deserves a place on the bookshelves of all serious students of Los Angeles and the rest of urban California."-- "Los Angeles Times Book Review"
"Sides makes a convincing argument that L.A. should be looked at as the model for understanding race relations in the second half of the twentieth century."-- "American Historical Review"
". . . Source material for for planners of tomorrow's multiracial cities . . . [and a] counter-narrative to the historic narrative of crime, violence and poverty."-- "Los Angeles Times Magazine"
"Josh Sides has given Los Angeles a modern history of its African American population that should stand for years as a standard work on that subject, and a foundation for comparative studies of other communities and ethnic experiences."-- "California History"
"Overall, this is a worthwhile book that merits close study."-- "Western Historical Quarterly"
". . . Sides leaves the reader with a convincing and disturbing picture of the history of African Americans, not only in Los Angeles, but also in many other communities in America that have followed a similar course."-- "Journal of American Ethnic History"
" . . . Sides compels American historians to adopt a broader vision of the course of twentieth-century history, one that encompasses the American West. From the Great Migrations of African Americans from the South to the disappearance of well-paying blue-collar jobs to civil rights movements, the book demonstrates that such transformations were indeed national events."-- "Reviews in American History"
"By focusing on the experiences of African Americans who moved to Los Angeles, this work makes a needed contribution to the literature on the Great Migration(s) of African American Americans from the South. Whereas scholarly attention has centered on how such migrants fared in the North, the experiences of those who moved west are far less understood. LA. City Limits pivots around the paradox of Los Angeles embodying the best and worst of what faced these urban black residents, highlighting three distinctive features that shaped black fortunes in the city: the diverse racial composition, dispersive geography, and the dynamic post-war economy they encountered. Sides's work convincingly argues that "place matters," and nicely complements Mike Davis's explorations of LA.'s sunshine and noir in City of Quartz and George Sanchez's examination of the fortunes of the Mexican American community in Los Angeles in his book Becoming Mexican American."-- "Southern California Quarterly"
"The broad chronological scope of L.A. City Limits allows Sides to explore the effects of long-term developments such as suburbanization and deindustrialization upon AfricanAmericans. It also leaves open to Sides and other historians the opportunity to explore in greater depth the experiences of African Americans at certain, critical points in time."-- "Pacific Historical Review"