Sunshine and Smoke: The Environmental History of Los Angeles

2006 
Land of Sunshine: An Environmental History of Metropolitan Los Angeles is a fascinating anthology on the relationship between the City of Angels and its often-turbulent environment. The nineteen essayists, which include scholars from a number of disciplines, set out to explore, in the words of editors William Deverell and Greg Hise, "a large set of regional environmental factors, environmental perspectives, and environmental challenges" (p. 1). Deverell and Hise have high expectations for the collection, hoping that Land of Sunshine will contribute to contemporary discussions on the sustainability of the greater Los Angeles region in particular, and urban-industrial society in general. With this goal, the editors, in a solid introduction, press the often-repeated but seldom recognized idea that history, indeed, "matters." Contributing scholars have the difficult task of investigating the relationship between successive social, economic, and cultural regimes and the southern California ecosystem. In this regard, the "metropolitan nature" of Los Angeles comprises the primary theme of the book. Borrowing from the concepts of the effects of city building on neighboring regions advanced by William Cronon, Donald Worster, and a host of other scholars, Land of Sunshine's authors examine "how people transform nature in particular sites and ... how what is created in particular locales is generative for local and broader culture" (p. 4). Planning is a unifying feature of Los Angeles's environmental history, and as a result, the city begins "the twenty-first century struggling with the consequences of success," in its urban arrangements, "both hoped for an unintended" (p. 10). As Deverell and Hise point out, "functional segregation ... which we now decry, was seen by sanitarians, social workers, progressives, and advocates for urban redevelopment as a cure-all for urban ills" (p. 6). Other reformers saw the automobile, now the bane of many Southland residents, as a critical tool for blurring the divisions between urban and rural. Well-meaning proponents of exclusionary zoning and early forms of NIMBY-ism (The
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