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A Peoples Guide To Orange County Elaine Lewinnek Gustavo Arellano Thuy Vo Dang

  • SKU: BELL-51824600
A Peoples Guide To Orange County Elaine Lewinnek Gustavo Arellano Thuy Vo Dang
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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A Peoples Guide To Orange County Elaine Lewinnek Gustavo Arellano Thuy Vo Dang instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of California Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 426.28 MB
Pages: 256
Author: Elaine Lewinnek; Gustavo Arellano; Thuy Vo Dang
ISBN: 9780520971554, 0520971558
Language: English
Year: 2022

Product desciption

A Peoples Guide To Orange County Elaine Lewinnek Gustavo Arellano Thuy Vo Dang by Elaine Lewinnek; Gustavo Arellano; Thuy Vo Dang 9780520971554, 0520971558 instant download after payment.

The full and fascinating guidebook that Orange County deserves.
A People’s Guide to Orange County is an alternative tour guide that documents sites of oppression, resistance, struggle, and transformation in Orange County, California. Orange County is more than the well-known images on orange crate labels, the high-profile amusement parks of Disneyland and Knott’s Berry Farm, or the beaches. It is also a unique site of agricultural and suburban history, political conservatism in a liberal state, and more diversity and discordance than its pop-cultural images show. It is a space of important agricultural labor disputes, segregation and resistance to segregation, privatization and the struggle for public space, politicized religions, Cold War global migrations, vibrant youth cultures, and efforts for environmental justice. Memorably, Ronald Reagan called Orange County the place “where all the good Republicans go to die,” but it is also the place where many working-class immigrants have come to live and work in its agricultural, military-industrial, and tourist service economies.
Orange County is the fifth-most populous county in America. If it were a city, it would be the nation’s third-largest city; if it were a state, its population would make it larger than twenty-one other states. It attracts 42 million tourists annually. Yet Orange County tends to be a chapter or two squeezed into guidebooks to Los Angeles or Disneyland. Mainstream guidebooks focus on Orange County’s amusement parks and wealthy coastal communities, with side trips to palatial shopping malls. These guides skip over Orange County’s most heterogeneous half, the inland space where the vast majority of oranges were grown alongside the oil derricks that kept the orange groves heated. Existing guidebooks render invisible the diverse people who have labored here. A People’s Guide to Orange County questions who gets to claim Orange County’s image, exposing the extraordinary stories embedded in the ordinary landscape.

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