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Breathing a new city of Los Angeles to life, through urban art and performance
Los Angeles. A city that is synonymous with celebrity and mass-market culture, is also, according to David James, synonymous with social alienation and dispersal. In the communities of Los Angeles, artists, cultural institutions and activities exist in ways that are often concealed from sight, obscured by the powerful presence of Hollywood and its machinations.
In this significant collection of original essays, The Sons and Daughters of Los reconstructs the city of Los Angeles with new cultural connections.
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Produktbeschreibung
Breathing a new city of Los Angeles to life, through urban art and performance

Los Angeles. A city that is synonymous with celebrity and mass-market culture, is also, according to David James, synonymous with social alienation and dispersal. In the communities of Los Angeles, artists, cultural institutions and activities exist in ways that are often concealed from sight, obscured by the powerful presence of Hollywood and its machinations.

In this significant collection of original essays, The Sons and Daughters of Los reconstructs the city of Los Angeles with new cultural connections. Explored here are the communities that offer alternatives to the picture of L..A. as a conglomeration of studios and mass media. Each essay examines a particular piece of, or place in, Los Angeles cultural life: from the Beyond Baroque Poetry Foundation, the Woman's Building, to Highways, and LACE, as well as the achievements of these grassroots initiatives. Also included is critical commentary on important artists, including Harry Gamboa, Jr., and others whose work have done much to shape popular culture in L.A. The cumulative effect of reading this book is to see a very different city take shape, one whose cultural landscape is far more innovative and reflective of the diversity of the city's people than mainstream notions of it suggest.

The Sons and Daughters of Los offers a substantive and complicated picture of the way culture plays itself it out on the smallest scale—in one of the largest metropolises on earth—contributing to a richer, more textured understanding of the vibrancy of urban life and art. Author note: David E. James is Professor in the School of Cinema-Television at the University of Southern California. He is the author or editor of five books, including, most recently, Power Misses: Essays Across (Un)Popular Culture.

"...The word Los became current among working-class Latinos, many of them displaced from their homelands by the global forces of capital and empire, as the name for the city in which they made their homes, a city where they hoped to find liberty and fellowship..." -from the Introduction

"The predisposition for universalizing forms of taste that favor timeless over timely work-the sensibility evident in most professional critics and historians of culture-militates against the study of local, tendentious, oppositional forms of endeavor. In Los Angeles, within the belly of the beast, a flourishing oppositional culture, ignored by the dominant media, exists. This book brings to light a remarkable set of artistic, institutional, and cultural practices of exemplary value. James is an excellent writer and dedicated scholar." -Bill Nichols, Professor and Director of the Graduate Program in Cinema Studies at San Francisco State University

"This is an important, multi-vocal, innovative and definitive volume on alternative community arts and cultural spaces as they are envisaged and nurtured in Los Angeles. The city and its innovative cultural institutions have long deserved such a passionate, resonant and articulate perspective as David James provides for them here in this superlatively edited volume." -Erika Suderburg, Professor, Film and Visual Culture Program and the Department of Art, University of California, Riverside

Content:
Contents
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction: The Sons and Daughters of Los – David E. James
2. Peripheral Outlaws: Beyond Baroque and the Los Angeles Poetry Renaissance – Bill Mohr
3. The Los Angeles Woman's Building and the Feminist Art Community, 1973-1991 – Laura Meyer
4. Fortifying Community: African American History and Culture in Leimert Park – Eric Gordon
5. Considering the Art World Alternatives: Lace And Community Formation in Los Angeles – Claudine Isé
6. Not History: Remarks on the Foundation for Art Resources, 1977-1998 – Sande Cohen
7. Highways Performance Space: Communities-in-Transit – Meiling Cheng
8. Signifying Nations: Cultural Institutions and the Korean Community in Los Angeles – Jiwon Ahn
9. All Over The Map: A History of L.A. Freeways – James M. Moran
10. Self-Help Graphics: Tomás Benitez Talks to Harry Gamboa Jr.
11. Unorthodox Mystics: Swans that Flock to the Vedanta Society of Southern California – Nithila Peter
12. Popular Cinemas in Los Angeles: The Case of Visual Communications – David E. James
About The Contributors