American Oasis
Finding the Future in the Cities of the Southwest
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- ¥2,000
発行者による作品情報
An expansive and revelatory historical exploration of the multicultural, water-seeking, land-destroying settlers of the most arid corner of North America, arguing that in order to know where the United States is going in the era of mass migration and climate crisis we must understand where the Southwest has already been
“A lively, thoughtful tour.”—The Los Angeles Times • “Elegant.”—The New Yorker
“Essential reading for understanding the forces shaping the modern Southwest—and, possibly, the planet’s future.”—New Mexico Magazine
Albuquerque. Phoenix. Tucson. El Paso. Las Vegas. Iconic American cities surrounded by desert and rust. Teeming metropolises that seem to exist independently of the seemingly inhospitable and arid landscape that surrounds them, belying the rich insight they offer into American stories of migration, industry, bloodshed, and rebirth.
Charting a geographic path through America's largest and hottest deserts, acclaimed journalist Kyle Paoletta maps the past and future of these cities, and the many other settlements from rural town to urban sprawl that make up the region that has come to be called “the American Southwest.” Weaving together the stories of immigrants and indigenous populations, American Oasis pulls back the layers of settlement, sediment, habit, and effect that successive empires have left on the region, from the Athapascan, Diné, Tewa, Apache, and Comanche, to the Spanish, Mexican, and, finally, American.
As Paoletta’s journey into the Southwest’s history becomes inextricably linked to an exploration of its dependency on water, he begins to ask: where, ultimately, will cities like Las Vegas and Phoenix find themselves once the Colorado River and its branches dry up? Richly reported and sweeping in its history, American Oasis is the story of what one iconic region’s past can tell us about our shared environmental and cultural future.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The American Southwest's past is a map to the rest of the country's future, according to this roving debut. Journalist Paoletta argues that the ways in which imperial violence, industrial expansion, mass migration, and the management of scarce water resources have played out in the arid desert region are a window onto what a climate-change–altered future will look like elsewhere. Paoletta puts a positive spin on what sounds like a bleak premise by emphasizing the region's "deep history of struggle... of multifarious peoples contending with each other and the unforgiving environment" to forge prosperous communities. He organizes his narrative around "the triumphs and failures" of this history—which range from the Pueblo Revolt of 1680 (when "Indigenous communities managed... to fully jettison" colonizers from their turf) to the popular mid-20th-century tourism magazine Arizona Highways (originally a state-run map publisher), whose editors portrayed the desert as not "nearly so desolate as... readers believed," contributing greatly to Phoenix's population boom and transformation into a teeming metropolis (a development Paoletta elegiacally pegs as both an astonishing triumph of human will—"a paradise out of whole cloth"—as well as one of colonial conquest and ecological folly). Peppered with fascinating historical tidbits gleaned as Paoletta traverses the region and encounters colorful characters, the book can sometimes meander a little far from its goal. Still, it makes for an enjoyable and immersive travelogue.