Storming the Gates of Paradise

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Storming the Gates of Paradise Page 44

by Rebecca Solnit


  361

  “Elsewhere such a fire might well be called a great one . . .”: ibid., p. 299.

  361

  “Sour, pseudo-religious folk on the shores of the Atlantic . . .”: ibid., p. 333.

  361

  “successively destroyed nearly all the old buildings and land-marks of Yerba Buena . . .”: ibid., p. 345.

  362

  “The lives lost yesterday are not chargeable to the earthquake . . .”: San Francisco Morning Call, October 22, 1868.

  362

  “The aim of Operation Gomorrah, as it was called . . .”: W. G. Sebald, On the Natural History of Destruction, trans. Anthea Bell (New York: Random House, 2003), p. 26.

  363

  “San Francisco is now developing programs . . .”: Leonard S. Mosias for the San Francisco Redevelopment Agency, “Residential Rehabilitation Survey Western Addition Area 2,” July 1962, unpaginated.

  365

  Between 1960 and 1974, the number of fires tripled: Jill Jonnes, We’re Still Here: The Rise, Fall, and Resurrection of the South Bronx (Boston: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1986), p. 261.

  365

  an average of 33 fires a night in the first half of the 1970s: Brian Wallis, ed., If You Lived Here: The City in Art, Theory, and Social Activism—A Project by Martha Rosler (Seattle: Bay Press, 1991), p. 288.

  365

  “in the first year without payoffs . . .”: Marshall Berman, “New York (New York City),” in These United States, ed. John Leonard (New York: Nation Books, 2003), p. 299.

  365

  “People don’t want housing in the South Bronx . . .”: Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan quoted in Jonnes, We’re Still Here, p. 92.

  366

  “For years, midnight fires ate up not only buildings . . .”: Berman, “New York (New York City),” p. 288.

  366

  “In the 1970s and 1980s, New York’s greatest spectacles . . .”: ibid., p. 294.

  366

  “whole areas look like the burnt-out ruins of war . . .”: Cardinal Terence Cooke quoted in Jonnes, We’re Still Here, p. 264.

  366

  “Already in the mid-1970s . . .”: Luc Sante, “My Lost City,” New York Review of Books, November 6, 2003, p. 34.

  370

  “From the outset . . .”: Sebald, Natural History of Destruction, p. 7.

  Permissions

  Most of the essays in this book have appeared in print in earlier versions, though often in overseas or local publications, lush books few seem to have found, and other obscure places. They have been edited for this volume; some have been shortened, while in others text that had been cut from the earlier version was restored. Some essays have been retitled or have had their original titles restored.

  “The Red Lands,” “California Comedy, or Surfing with Dante,” and “A Murder of Ravens: On Globalized Species” originally appeared in the London Review of Books in 2003, 2004, and 2006, respectively.

  “The Postmodern Old West, or the Precession of Cowboys and Indians” was originally published in the September and December 1996 issues of Art issues.

  “The Struggle of Dawning Intelligence: Creating, Revising, and Recognizing Native American Monuments” is included here courtesy of Harvard Design Magazine, where it first appeared in the fall 1999 issue.

  “The Garden of Merging Paths” first appeared in Resisting the Virtual Life: The Culture and Politics of Information, edited by James Brook and Iain A. Boal and published by City Lights Books in 1995.

  “A Route in the Shape of a Question” was published in a truncated version in the Los Angeles Times in 2004.

  “Thirty-Nine Steps Across the Border and Back” appeared in Against the Wall, edited by Michael Sorkin and published by the New Press in 2005.

  “Nonconforming Uses: Teddy Cruz on Both Sides of the Border” was originally published as part of Democratic Vistas Profiles: Essays in the Arts and Democracy (http://artspolicy.colum.edu/DVProfiles.html), Center for Arts Policy at Columbia College, Chicago, in 2006.

  “The Price of Gold, the Value of Water” appeared in Sierra magazine in 2000.

  “Meanwhile Back at the Ranch,” “Jailbirds I Have Loved,” “Fragments of the Future: The FTAA in Miami,” “Liberation Conspiracies,” “Sontag and Tsunami,” and “The Wal-Mart Biennale” all originally appeared at Tomdispatch.com.

  “Poison Pictures” and “Other Daughters, Other American Revolutions” were published in The Nation in 2003 and 2006, respectively.

  “Excavating the Sky” was the essay included in Richard Misrach’s The Sky Book, published by Arena Editions in 2000.

  “Drawing the Constellations” accompanied the photograph “Home” in Meridel Rubenstein’s retrospective volume Belonging: Los Alamos to Vietnam, published by St. Anne’s Press in 2004.

  “Hugging the Shadows,” “Justice by Moonlight,” “Mirror in the Street,” “The Silence of the Lambswool Cardigans,” “Locked Horns,” and “The Orbits of Earthly Bodies” all appeared in Orion magazine from 2003 through 2005.

  “Making It Home: Travels outside the Fear Economy” was part of the text of a talk delivered by the author at the 2005 Chicago Humanities Festival.

  A slightly longer version of “Every Corner Is Alive: Eliot Porter as an Environmentalist and an Artist” appeared in Eliot Porter: The Color of Wildness, a book edited by John Rohrbach to accompany an Eliot Porter retrospective, copublished in 2001 by the Amon Carter Museum and the Aperture Foundation; it is included here courtesy of the Museum.

  “The Botanical Circus, or Adventures in American Gardening” was the introduction to John Pfahl’s Extreme Horticulture, published by Francis Lincoln Books in 2003, and appears here by permission of the press.

  “Seven Stepping Stones down the Primrose Path past Gender” was the keynote address delivered by the author at a 2002 conference on landscape and gender, sponsored by the Department of Landscape Architecture, University of California at Berkeley.

  “San Francisco: The Metamorphosis” was included in These United States: Original Essays by Leading American Writers on Their State within the Union, edited by John Leonard and published by Nation Books in 2003.

  “The Heart of the City” and “Gaping Questions” were published in the San Francisco Chronicle in 2004 and 2002, respectively, though the latter was written in October of 2001.

  A longer version of “The Ruins of Memory” was included in Mark Klett’s book with Michael Lundgren, with essays by Philip Fradkin and Rebecca Solnit, After the Ruins, 1906 and 2006: Rephotographing the San Francisco Earthquake and Fire, published by the University of California Press in 2006.

  “Seashell to Ear” was the text for Helen Douglas’s photographic book Unravelling the Ripple, published by Pocketbooks in Edinburgh in 2001.

  Index

  The index that appeared in the print version of this title was intentionally removed from the eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below

  Adams, Ansel

  Adams, Robert

  Alighieri, Dante

  American Civil Liberties Union

  Anthony, Carl

  Apple Computer

  Arcadia

  Arendt, Hannah

  Aristotle

  Balboa Park

  Baldwin, James

  Bangladesh

  Barnum, P. T.

  Barry Goldwater Bombing Range

  Basso, Keith

  Baudrillard, Jean

  Beard, Peter

  Becoming Citizens: Family Life and the Politics of Disability (Schwartzenberg)

  Benet, Stephen Vincent

  Benjamin, Walter

  Benton, Thomas Hart

  Berlin Wall

  Berman, Marshall

  Birds, bird migration

  Birk, Sandow

  Black, Michael

  Black Elk, Charlotte

  Black Rock Desert

&nb
sp; Bonneville Salt Flats

  Borders

  Borges, Jorge Luis

  Brashares, June

  Brechin, Gray

  Brooks, Drex

  Brower, David

  Brown, Dee

  Bryant, William Cullen

  Buffalo Bill, Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show. See Cody, William F.

  Burnett, Governor Peter

  Burtynsky, Edward

  Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee (Brown)

  Bury the Chains: Prophets and Rebels in the Fight to Free an Empire’s Slaves (Hochschild)

  Bush, George

  California

  Canada

  Capital (Marx)

  Caponigro, Eleanor

  Carson, Kit

  Carson, Rachel

  Casa Familiar, San Ysidro

  Central Park

  Cerberes, France

  ChevronTexaco

  Churchill, Ward

  Cities: and countryside

  Civil disobedience

  “Civil Disobedience” (Thoreau)

  Cixous, Hélène

  Clarkson, Thomas

  Cleland, John

  Clinton, Bill

  Clouds

  Cody, William F. (“Buffalo Bill”)

  Cohen, Michael

  Cole, Thomas

  Coleridge, Samuel Taylor

  Concord, Massachusetts

  Conrad, Joseph

  Cowboys

  Crazy Horse

  Cruz, Teddy

  Cyanide

  Dalton Gang

  Dann, Carrie and Mary

  Dante’s Inferno (book)

  Davis, Mike

  Day After Tomorrow, The (film)

  Dead Man (film)

  Death and Life of Great American Cities The (Jacobs)

  Demonstrations. See Protests; Civil disobedience

  Desert. See also Great Basin; Nevada; New Mexico

  Devil’s Tower National Monument

  Divine Comedy

  Durand, Asher B.

  Durham, Jimmie

  Earp, Wyatt

  Earp, Allie

  Eastwood, Clint

  Eden, see also Paradise

  El Dorado County

  Emerson, Ralph Waldo

  End of the Trail, The (sculpture)

  Engels, Friedrich

  Environmentalism, environmental movement. See also Carson, Rachel; Porter, Eliot; Sierra Club

  Equiano, Olaudah

  Fallon Naval Air Station, NV

  Fanny Hill (Cleland)

  Fast Runner, The (Atanarjuat) (film)

  Feminism

  Fences. See also Borders

  Finn, Huckleberry

  First Amendment

  Fittko, Lisa

  Franco, Francisco

  Fraser, James Earl

  Frayling, Christopher

  Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA)

  Fremont, Jessie Benton

  Fremont, John

  Friedan, Betty

  Frischman, Steve (Nevada Nuclear Projects Office)

  Galilei, Galileo

  Gardens

  Garvey, Sean

  Gender

  Getty Museum, J. Paul

  Gilbert, Jan

  Glen Canyon, Glen Canyon Dam

  Globalization. See also World Trade Organization (WTO); North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA); Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA)

  Gold

  Gold Rush

  Gomez-Pena, Guillermo

  Great Basin

  Great Basin Mine Watch

  Guatemala City

  Hamilton, Ann

  Harney, Corbin

  Heap of Birds, Edgar Hachivi

  Heart of Darkness (Conrad)

  Hernandez, Ezekiel

  Hesiod

  Hickok, Wild Bill

  High Country News

  Highway 50, “the Loneliest Highway in America”

  Hochschild, Adam

  Homelessness

  Hugo, Victor

  Immigrants. See Borders

  In Wildness Is the Preservation of the World (Porter)

  Indians. See Native Americans

  Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)

  Iraq, U.S. war in

  Irwin, Robert

  Ishi, “the last Yahi”

  Jackson, J. B.

  Jacobs, Jane

  Jarmusch, Jim

  Jefferson, Thomas

  Jesus

  Johnson, Jay

  Jupiter, moons of

  Kerouac, Jack

  King, Jr., Martin Luther

  Klein, Norman

  Kodak factory

  Krutch, Joseph Wood

  Labyrinths

  Landscape. See also individual artists

  Lang, Julian

  Latin America

  Lee Vining (town)

  LeGuin, Ursula K.

  Levada, Archbishop William J.

  Levi-Strauss, Claude

  Limerick, Patricia Nelson

  Lippard, Lucy

  Little Bighorn, battlefield

  Lockheed Missiles and Space Corporation

  Lombardi, Mark

  Long, Richard

  Los Angeles

  Mander, Jerry

  Maps

  Marshall, George

  Marston, Ed

  Marx, Karl

  Mazes. See also Labyrinths

  McCannell, Dean

  McPhee, John

  Melville, Herman

  Memory

  Merchant, Carolyn

  Mercury

  Metaphor

  Mexico

  Cancun, WTO meeting in

  war on. See also Borders; Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

  Mik, Aernout (artist)

  Miller, Jeffrey

  Mining

  Misrach, Richard

  Montana

  Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo (Madres de la Plaza de Mayo)

  Mountain lions

  Muir, John

  Mulroy, Pat

  Monument Valley (Tse Bii’Nidzinsigai)

  Monuments. See Public art

  Myers, Tom (Great Basin Mine Watch)

  Names, naming

  National Lawyers Guild

  Native Americans

  Inuit

  Kiowa

  Lakota

  Mattole

  Miwok (Coast)

  Nisenan

  Ohlone

  Pequots

  Pueblo

  Southern Sierra Miwok

  Western Apache

  Western Shoshone

  White Clay Assinboine

  Nelson, Richard K.

  Nevada

  Nevada Test Site

  New Age movements

  Newhall, Beaumont

  New Mexico

  New Urbanism

  New York City

  New York Times

  North America Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)

  Nuclear weapons, nuclear war

  Nuclear waste

  Depleted uranium

  O’Dea, Martina

  O.K. Corral

  Oklahoma

  On Photography. See Sontag, Susan

  Ono, Yoko

  Ouverture, Toussaint L’

  Ovid

  Paradise

  Pauli, Lori

  Pedestrians, pedestrianism

  Pena, Veronica de la

  Perenyi, Eleanor

  Pesticides. See also Carson Rachel

  Petefish, Andy

  Photography. See also Misrach, Richard; Porter, Eliot; Rubenstein, Meridel; Sontag, Susan

  Pioneer Monument, San Francisco

  Place, idea of

  Sacred sites

  Place No One Knew, The (Porter)

  Playboy channel and magazine

  Plazas

  Pope, Alexander

  Port Bou, Spain

  Porter, Eliot

  Porter, Fairfield

  Postmodernism, postmodernists

  Powell, John Wesley

  Prest,
John

  Price, Jenny

  Project Underground

  Protests. See also Civil disobedience

  Public art

  Racism. See also Borders; Native Americans; Slavery, slaves

  Reagan, Ronald

  Reclaim the Streets

  Reisner, Mark

  Report on an Expedition of the Country Lying between the Missouri River and the Rocky Mountains (Fremont)

  Repo Man (film)

  Republican Party

  Republican National Convention of 2004

  Rexroth, Kenneth

  Richard, Frances

  Rigo 23 (artist)

  Rio Grande (river)

  Road Runner (cartoon series)

  Rohrbach, John

  Rosenblum, Robert

  Rosenzweig, Ray

  Rothko, Mark

  Rubenstein, Meridel

  Ruskin, John

  Sacramento River

  Sacred sites

  Safde, Moishe

  Salmon

  San Diego

  San Francisco

  San Jose

  Sanders, Marcus

  Santa Clara County

  Santa Fe, New Mexico

  Sante, Luc

  Sawyer, Alonzo, Judge

  Schwartzenberg, Susan

  Seattle. See also World Trade Organization (WTO)

  Sebald, W. G.

  September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. See World Trade Center

  Sequioa National Forest

  Sewell, Chris

  Sharp, Granville

  Shepard, Paul

  Sierra Club

  Sierra Nevada

  Silent Spring (Carson)

  Silicon Valley

  Silko, Leslie Marmon

  Sitting Bull

  Sky

  Slavery, slaves

  Smith, Ted

  Smithsonian Institution

  Snyder, Gary

  Sommer, Frederick

  Sonoma, CA

  Sonoran pronghorn

  Sontag, Susan

  Sorkin, Michael

  South Yuba River Citizens League

  Southern Poverty Law Center

  Sphinx in the City, The

  Stanford, Leland

  Starhawk

  Starr, Kevin

  Stewart, George R.

  Stieglitz, Alfred

  Superfund sites

  Sweet Medicine: Sites of Indian Massacres, Battlefields, and Treaties (Brooks)

  Technology

  Thacker, Christopher

  Thoreau, Henry David

  Tijuana

  Timoney, John, Police Chief, Miami

  Tompkins, Jane

  Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

  Trimble, Stephen

  Tsunami of 2004

  Turner, J. M. W.

  Twain, Mark

 

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