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Dead Cities: A Natural History

Arts: Dead Cities: A Natural History
By Mike Davis. | The New Press. $27.95.

November/December 2002 Issue


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Mike Davis has long been America's guide to the shadowlands of postmodern urbanism. In City of Quartz, he unveiled a Boschian vision of Los Angeles -- the city of dreams -- as a Blade Runner dystopia already upon us. Ecology of Fear painted L.A. in a paranoid palette, as a metropolis unlikely to survive the combined threats of mega-quakes, fires, and El Niños. Now, as the nation attempts to reinvent its downtowns as well-secured malls, Dead Cities forcefully returns our gaze to urban landscapes divided by race and class, and lurching unsustainably toward a showdown with Mother Nature.

If too many of Dead Cities' chapters read as filler -- essays on Southern California politics that would have felt dated five years ago -- the fresher work effectively challenges the much touted revival of America's cities. Davis' strange tour winds from the riot-scarred streets of Compton to "the most polluted site on Earth" -- a bioweapons test site just west of Salt Lake City -- to collapsing East Coast ghettos.

As ever, Davis remains preoccupied with the West. At his darkest, he foresees a future in which "sprawl ... addiction, violence, and simulation will have overwhelmed every vital life-space west of the Rockies." It's the West become Los Angeles. Or worse yet, Las Vegas -- a city whose "prodigal overconsumption," hyper-sprawl, and poverty-stricken inner city make it the apogee of unsustainability. Creating a viable "alternative urbanism," writes Davis, presents an extraordinary challenge. But then again, "this may be the last generation even given the opportunity to try."



 

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