Every month the AAG compiles a list of newly-published books in geography and related areas. Some are selected for review in the AAG Review of Books.
Publishers are welcome to send new volumes to the Editor-in-Chief (Kent Mathewson, Editor-in-Chief, AAG Review of Books, Department of Geography and Anthropology, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70803).
Anyone interested in reviewing these or other titles should also contact the Editor-in-Chief.
April 2013
Approaches to Disaster Management: Examining the Implications of Hazards, Emergencies and Disasters. Tiefenbacher, John. Manhattan, NY: InTech 2013. $Free Electronic (ISBN 978-953-51-1093-4).
Asia Rising: Growth and Resilience in an Uncertain Global Economy. Hill, Hal and Maria Socorro Gochoco-Bautista, eds. Northampton, Mass: Edward Elgar 2013. $185 Cloth (ISBN 978-1-781-00797-6).
Becoming Melungeon: Making an Ethnic Identity in the Appalachian South. Schrift, Melissa. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press 2013. $35.00 Cloth (ISBN 978-0-8032-7154-8).
Defensive Environmentalists and the Dynamics of Global Reform. Rudel, Thomas K. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press 2013. $95.00 Cloth (ISBN 978-1-107-03052-7).
Everyday Las Vegas: Local Life in a Tourist Town. Rowley, Rex J. Reno, NV: University of Nevada Press 2013. $ Cloth (ISBN 978-0-87417-905-7).
Growing Resistance: Canadian Farmers and the Politics of Genetically Modified Wheat. Eaton, Emily. Winnipeg, MB: University of Manitoba Press 2013. $31.95 Paper (ISBN 978-0-88755-744-6).
History of Ancient Geography. Thomson, J. Oliver. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press 2013. $41.99 Paper (ISBN 978-1-107-68992-3).
Impossible Citizens: Dubai’s Indian Diaspora. Vora, Neha. Durham, NC: Duke University Press 2013. $24.95 Paper (ISBN 978-0-8223-5393-5).
Mark My Words: Native Women Mapping Our Nations. Goeman, Mishuana. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press 2013. $25.00 Paper (ISBN 978-0-8166-7791-7).
Potent Landscapes: Place and Mobility in Eastern Indonesia. Allerton, Catherine. Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai’I Press 2013. $25 Paper (ISBN 978-0-8248-3800-3).
Street Fight: The Politics of Mobility in San Francisco. Henderson, Jason. Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press 2013. $24.95 Paper (ISBN 978-1-55849-999-7).
The Hub’s Metropolis: Greater Boston’s Development from Railroad Suburbs to Smart Growth. O’Connell, James C.. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press 2013. $34.95 Cloth (ISBN 978-0-262-01875-3).
The View from Above: The Science of Social Space. Haffner, Jeanne. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press 2013. $32.00 Cloth (ISBN 978-0-262-01879-1).
The World of Lucha Libre: Secrets, Revelations, and Mexican National Identity. Levi, Heather. Durham, NC: Duke University Press 2008. $ Paper (ISBN 978-0-8223-4232-8).
Views of the Cordilleras and Monuments of the Indigenous Peoples of the Americas: A Critical Edition. von Humboldt, Alexander with Vera M. Kutzinski, and Ottmar Ette, eds. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press 2012. $65.00 Cloth (ISBN 978-0-226-86506-5).
Conservation Planning: Shaping the Future. Craighead, F. Lance and Charles L. Convis Jr. Redlands, CA: ESRI Press 2013. $1119.95 Paper (ISBN 978-1-58948-263-0).
Contested Water: The Struggle Against Water Privatization in the United States and Canada. Robinson, Joanna L. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press 2013. $23.00 Paper (ISBN 978-0-262-51039-0).
Getting to Know ArcGIS for Desktop, 3rd edition. Law, Michael and Amy Collins. Redlands, CA: ESRI Press 2013. $84.95 Paper (ISBN 978-1-58948-308-8).
Lining Up Data in ArcGIS:A Guide to Map Projections, Second Edition. Maher, Margaret M. Redlands, CA: ESRI Press 2013. $24.95 Paper (ISBN 978-1-58948-342-2).
Between Giants: The Battle for the Baltics in World War II. Buttar, Prit. Long Island City, NY: Osprey Publishing 2013. $29.95 Cloth (ISBN 978-1-78096-163-7).
Food and Society: Principles and Paradoxes. Guptill, Amy E., Denise A. Copelton, and Betsy Lucal. Malden, MA: Polity Books 2012. $23.95 Paper (ISBN 978-0-7456-7282-6).
Imperial Geographies in Byzantine and Ottoman Space. Bazzaz, Sahar, Yota Batsaki, and Dimiter Angelov. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press 2013. $24.95 Paper (ISBN 9780674066625).
Memorylands: Heritage and Identity in Europe Today. Macdonald, Sharon. New York, NY: Routledge 2013. $39.95 Paper (ISBN 978-0-415-45334-9).
Migration and Climate Change. Graeme Hugo, ed. Northampton, Mass: Edward Elgar 2013. $520 Cloth (ISBN 978-1-84980-851-4).
Race and Immigration in the New Ireland. Ulin, Julieann Veronica, Heather Edwards, and Sean O’Brien, eds. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press 2013. $35.00 Paper (ISBN 978-0-268-02777-3).
Transnational Migration. Faist, Thomas, Margit Fauser, and Eveline Reisenauer. Malden, MA: Polity Books 2013. $22.95 Paper (ISBN 978-0-7456-4978-8).
Traveling the 38th Parallel: A Water Line Around the World. Carle, David, and Janet Carle. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press 2013. $29.95 Cloth (ISBN 978-0-520-26654-4).
Regionalists on the Left: Radical Voices from the American West. Steiner, Michael C, ed. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press 2013. $39.95 Cloth (ISBN 9780806143408).
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Gary Hausladen
Gary Hausladen, long-time professor of geography at University of Nevada, Reno, died on April 8, 2013, at the age of 66. During his more than 25 years at the university, he was respected and honored by all. His awards include the university’s Alan Bible Teaching Excellence Award, College of Arts & Sciences and the Tibbitts Distinguished Teacher Award, the university system’s Regents’ Teaching Award. He also received CASE’s Nevada Professor of the Year for Excellence in Teaching, National Council for Geographic Education’s Distinguished Teaching Achievement Award and the Wilbur S. Shepperson Humanities Book Award for Western Places, American Myths: How We Think About the West.
Hasladen earned his Ph.D. in 1983 and M.A. in 1979 in geography from Syracuse University and received his B.A. in 1969 in political science from Stanford University. After attending Stanford, he joined the Air Force and served as a C130 pilot in Vietnam and Cambodia. During his military service, he became fluent in Russian and later traveled to Moscow as a Fulbright Scholar.
Before settling down at the U. of Nevada, Reno, he taught at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and at Southwest Texas State University. During his time in Nevada, he established and served as the director of the Geography Alliance in Nevada (GAIN) to support teachers in building solid foundations in geography for students in grades K-12.
He was married to his wife Marilyn for 46 years and had three children.
Bob Crisler, a regional geographer who spent much of his career at University of Louisiana-Lafayette, passed away on March 23, 2013, aged 92.
Robert Morris Crisler was born on January 5, 1921 in Columbia, Missouri. Although his father was a professor of veterinary medicine at the University of Missouri, he seems to have developed an early fascination for regional geography. A childhood friend remembered how, by the time he was in grade school, he could name every town on Highway 40 from St. Louis to Kansas City and state how far apart they were.
After attending Hickman High School, Crisler gained a place at the University of Missouri, graduating with a bachelor’s degree in geology in 1941. He then moved to graduate school at Northwestern University in Illinois but was subsequently drafted into the army after America became involved in World War II.
He served with the 88th Division in North Africa and in the Italian campaign. He left the military in February 1946 as a first lieutenant, having received a Purple Heart after he was shot in the arm and an oak leaf when shrapnel injured his back.
Crisler returned to Northwestern to complete his master’s degree (1947) and doctorate (1949) in geography. His thesis was entitled “An Experiment in Regional Delimitation: the Little Dixie Region of Missouri,” which looked at the geopolitics of that region of Missouri. Many sources credit him for coining and fully defining the term ‘Little Dixie.’
His first teaching assignment was at Washington University in St. Louis, starting in 1948, until he was recalled to the military during the Korean conflict. He was assigned to the Pentagon and worked for the CIA as an intelligence officer.
After discharge in 1952, he returned to teach at Washington University until 1954 when he moved to Southwestern Louisiana Institute and University of Southwestern Louisiana (now known as University of Louisiana-Lafayette) where he stayed until retirement. He was a professor of geography and served as head of the department of social studies. During this period he also served as a Louisiana state representative from 1972 to 1976 for District 45.
Crisler stayed in Lafayette for the remainder of his life. He was involved various local organizations including the Louisiana Retired Teachers Association, American Legion Post 69, Pinhook Rotary Club, Louisiana Historical Association, and First Lutheran Church in Lafayette. He was also involved in SCORE, counseling new business owners. In addition, he was a member of Mizzou Alumni Association, the Geological Sciences Alumni of the University of Missouri, and The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi.
It was for a particular hobby, though, that Crisler was noted. Throughout his life he was an avid collector of license plates. His son, Charles, reminisced about how the interest first developed: “Some people look at license plates when they drive and play games with them. Well, we decided we’d get one from each state. And then we wanted to get one from each year.” Together they amassed 3,000 license plates at one point. He was a member of the Automobile License Plate Collectors Association, attending meets and conventions all around the country and serving the club in many capacities, including several years as its president.
Crisler was predeceased by his first wife, Shirley Spohn, who passed away in 1978, and by his second wife, Freda Glenn Erickson, who passed away in 2012. He is survived by two sons, six grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren.
Every month the AAG compiles a list of newly-published books in geography and related areas. Some are selected for review in the AAG Review of Books.
Publishers are welcome to send new volumes to the Editor-in-Chief (Kent Mathewson, Editor-in-Chief, AAG Review of Books, Department of Geography and Anthropology, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70803).
Anyone interested in reviewing these or other titles should also contact the Editor-in-Chief.
April 2013
Approaches to Disaster Management: Examining the Implications of Hazards, Emergencies and Disasters. Tiefenbacher, John. Manhattan, NY: InTech 2013. $Free Electronic (ISBN 978-953-51-1093-4).
Asia Rising: Growth and Resilience in an Uncertain Global Economy. Hill, Hal and Maria Socorro Gochoco-Bautista, eds. Northampton, Mass: Edward Elgar 2013. $185 Cloth (ISBN 978-1-781-00797-6).
Becoming Melungeon: Making an Ethnic Identity in the Appalachian South. Schrift, Melissa. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press 2013. $35.00 Cloth (ISBN 978-0-8032-7154-8).
Defensive Environmentalists and the Dynamics of Global Reform. Rudel, Thomas K. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press 2013. $95.00 Cloth (ISBN 978-1-107-03052-7).
Everyday Las Vegas: Local Life in a Tourist Town. Rowley, Rex J. Reno, NV: University of Nevada Press 2013. $ Cloth (ISBN 978-0-87417-905-7).
Growing Resistance: Canadian Farmers and the Politics of Genetically Modified Wheat. Eaton, Emily. Winnipeg, MB: University of Manitoba Press 2013. $31.95 Paper (ISBN 978-0-88755-744-6).
History of Ancient Geography. Thomson, J. Oliver. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press 2013. $41.99 Paper (ISBN 978-1-107-68992-3).
Impossible Citizens: Dubai’s Indian Diaspora. Vora, Neha. Durham, NC: Duke University Press 2013. $24.95 Paper (ISBN 978-0-8223-5393-5).
Mark My Words: Native Women Mapping Our Nations. Goeman, Mishuana. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press 2013. $25.00 Paper (ISBN 978-0-8166-7791-7).
Potent Landscapes: Place and Mobility in Eastern Indonesia. Allerton, Catherine. Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai’I Press 2013. $25 Paper (ISBN 978-0-8248-3800-3).
Street Fight: The Politics of Mobility in San Francisco. Henderson, Jason. Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press 2013. $24.95 Paper (ISBN 978-1-55849-999-7).
The Hub’s Metropolis: Greater Boston’s Development from Railroad Suburbs to Smart Growth. O’Connell, James C.. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press 2013. $34.95 Cloth (ISBN 978-0-262-01875-3).
The View from Above: The Science of Social Space. Haffner, Jeanne. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press 2013. $32.00 Cloth (ISBN 978-0-262-01879-1).
The World of Lucha Libre: Secrets, Revelations, and Mexican National Identity. Levi, Heather. Durham, NC: Duke University Press 2008. $ Paper (ISBN 978-0-8223-4232-8).
Views of the Cordilleras and Monuments of the Indigenous Peoples of the Americas: A Critical Edition. von Humboldt, Alexander with Vera M. Kutzinski, and Ottmar Ette, eds. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press 2012. $65.00 Cloth (ISBN 978-0-226-86506-5).
Conservation Planning: Shaping the Future. Craighead, F. Lance and Charles L. Convis Jr. Redlands, CA: ESRI Press 2013. $1119.95 Paper (ISBN 978-1-58948-263-0).
Contested Water: The Struggle Against Water Privatization in the United States and Canada. Robinson, Joanna L. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press 2013. $23.00 Paper (ISBN 978-0-262-51039-0).
Getting to Know ArcGIS for Desktop, 3rd edition. Law, Michael and Amy Collins. Redlands, CA: ESRI Press 2013. $84.95 Paper (ISBN 978-1-58948-308-8).
Lining Up Data in ArcGIS:A Guide to Map Projections, Second Edition. Maher, Margaret M. Redlands, CA: ESRI Press 2013. $24.95 Paper (ISBN 978-1-58948-342-2).
Between Giants: The Battle for the Baltics in World War II. Buttar, Prit. Long Island City, NY: Osprey Publishing 2013. $29.95 Cloth (ISBN 978-1-78096-163-7).
Food and Society: Principles and Paradoxes. Guptill, Amy E., Denise A. Copelton, and Betsy Lucal. Malden, MA: Polity Books 2012. $23.95 Paper (ISBN 978-0-7456-7282-6).
Imperial Geographies in Byzantine and Ottoman Space. Bazzaz, Sahar, Yota Batsaki, and Dimiter Angelov. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press 2013. $24.95 Paper (ISBN 9780674066625).
Memorylands: Heritage and Identity in Europe Today. Macdonald, Sharon. New York, NY: Routledge 2013. $39.95 Paper (ISBN 978-0-415-45334-9).
Migration and Climate Change. Graeme Hugo, ed. Northampton, Mass: Edward Elgar 2013. $520 Cloth (ISBN 978-1-84980-851-4).
Race and Immigration in the New Ireland. Ulin, Julieann Veronica, Heather Edwards, and Sean O’Brien, eds. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press 2013. $35.00 Paper (ISBN 978-0-268-02777-3).
Transnational Migration. Faist, Thomas, Margit Fauser, and Eveline Reisenauer. Malden, MA: Polity Books 2013. $22.95 Paper (ISBN 978-0-7456-4978-8).
Traveling the 38th Parallel: A Water Line Around the World. Carle, David, and Janet Carle. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press 2013. $29.95 Cloth (ISBN 978-0-520-26654-4).
Regionalists on the Left: Radical Voices from the American West. Steiner, Michael C, ed. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press 2013. $39.95 Cloth (ISBN 9780806143408).
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Annual Meeting
Ethnic Change and Enclaves in Los Angeles
By James P. Allen and Eugene Turner
Los Angeles County is home to 10 million people—more than any other county in the U.S. It includes the City of Los Angeles and 87 other cities. Although interconnected with four adjacent counties in a massive metropolitan area of over 17 million residents, Los Angeles County has always had the region’s greatest ethnic diversity.
In this article we look briefly at ethnic trends in the county up to 2010 and then focus on the larger ethnic residential and commercial concentrations, often called enclaves. Lastly, we discuss two smaller concentrations easily accessible from your hotel in Downtown Los Angeles. All eight enclaves are located on the accompanying map.
In 1960, non-Hispanic Whites comprised 80 percent of Los Angeles County’s population, but since then their numbers have been decreasing, due especially to moves to outlying counties and to other states and increased immigration of other groups. Now only 28 percent of county residents are Whites. Despite this general decline of Whites, immigration has tripled Armenian numbers since 1980, with 170,000 now living in the county.
The largest ethnic group in the county is Hispanics, or Latinos, who make up 48 percent of the total. About 80 percent of Latinos are of Mexican origin, followed by Salvadorans and Guatemalans. The next largest groups are Asians (13 percent) and Blacks (8 percent). Black numbers have decreased since 1990, although the four outlying counties have shown gains as many Blacks sought lower-priced housing in more distant locales. Asian immigration has led to rapid growth over several decades so that now there are over 300,000 each of Filipinos and Chinese, with Koreans and Japanese each numbering over 100,000.
Ethnic enclaves in Los Angeles County. Names of ethnic enclaves are indicated in red italicized type. Los Angeles City is shown in light green, other selected incorporated places in various tints, and remaining areas in dark gray. Smaller ethnic enclaves and places are located by dots.
Larger Enclaves
Only about half of the people in most ethnic groups live in any geographical concentration of their group, but we sketch here several of the largest and best known enclaves.
Mexicans in the Eastside. Although Los Angeles was founded by the Spanish in 1781 and was later part of an independent Mexico, California became U.S. territory in 1848. English-speaking Whites soon established their control, and many Mexicans lost their land holdings while most Mexicans were relegated to low-paying and menial jobs.
Railroad connection to Eastern states in the 1880s led to a rapid in-migration of Whites. After 1900 increasing congestion and aging structures in Downtown led to a program of urban renewal. This had the effect of moving Mexicans from the old Plaza area eastward across the Los Angeles River into newly developed Boyle Heights and nearby rural areas. Throughout the twentieth century, as the Mexican population has grown by immigration and natural increase, many Mexicans have moved farther east into suburbs of the San Gabriel Valley that had previously been almost all White. The Eastside’s oldest sections, Boyle Heights and East Los Angeles, have its lowest incomes and are over 75 percent Mexican, but incomes are higher and populations more mixed farther east.
Whites in the Westside. West of the Los Angeles River, this loosely defined area was built up as suburbs beginning in the 1920s and remains two-thirds White and mostly middle- and upper-class. Except for newer sections of Downtown, the Westside contains most of Los Angeles’ major office buildings, higher-paying jobs, and expensive homes. It excludes the older, poor, and more racially mixed Hollywood, but it stretches from about five miles west of Downtown westward past the independent cities of Beverly Hills and West Hollywood. The Westside extends from the Santa Monica Mountains on the north to approximately Pico Blvd. on the south, with White percentages increasing in wealthier neighborhoods, especially those near and in the mountains.
The Westside contains the most prestigious residential areas of the city and, together with Downtown, represents the city’s center of economic power. A reflection of the social and economic divide between Whites and both Mexicans and Blacks is the fact that most Westside Whites never venture into the Eastside or South Los Angeles.
Blacks in South Los Angeles. To the south of Downtown and Interstate 10 is another older suburb, once a home to both Whites and Blacks. When racial segregation became legal and widespread in the 1920s, Whites began moving out of the area to newer housing. With their departure, and restrictions on the areas in which Blacks (and Asians and Mexicans, too) could rent or buy houses, a large area (formerly called South Central) extending south past Watts developed into a mostly Black and poor ghetto.
Beginning in the 1950s, as residential segregation lost its legal support, some middle-class Blacks left South Los Angeles, often moving westward, prompting many Whites to depart. There are now important middle-class and more affluent Black populations in Inglewood and the Baldwin Hills, and Leimert Park on Crenshaw Blvd. has become the leading center of Black cultural life. Since 1990 Blacks have moved into many other parts of the city that had been very White, such as the San Fernando Valley to the north. Over the last half-century the departure of middle-class Blacks from older settlements has exacerbated problems such as poor schools, gangs, and crime in those areas, where poverty and unemployment remain major problems.
However, demand for single-family housing by Mexicans and Central Americans has kept home prices fairly high, and homeowning Blacks have found a ready market. The net effect is that South Los Angeles east of Interstate 110 has become well over half Latino, resulting in stores and churches catering to both Black and Latino populations.
Chinese in the West San Gabriel Valley. Beginning in the 1970s a Chinese immigrant began to develop America’s first suburban Chinatown a few miles east of Downtown, choosing Monterey Park as its focus. With advertisements in Hong Kong and Taiwan calling it the “Chinese Beverly Hills,” he attracted many families who bought land, apartment buildings, and businesses. Before the arrival of Chinese, the West San Gabriel Valley was mostly White but with some Mexicans and Japanese. Immigration has resulted in a steadily expanding Chinese, Taiwanese, and Chinese-Vietnamese area focused on Monterey Park, Arcadia, Alhambra, and Rosemead, with these groups now comprising 46 percent of the four cities’ total population. With many immigrants bringing in money for home purchase and other investments, some Chinese in the West San Gabriel Valley have bought expensive homes and opened a full range of businesses and services. More affluent Chinese and other Asians often settled in newer homes farther east in the county, in Walnut, Diamond Bar, or Cerritos.
Armenians in Glendale. Although Armenian immigrants have been settling in Los Angeles for over a century, the pleasant suburban city of Glendale has recently become especially attractive to Armenians from Iran. In the late 1970s many Iranian families, anticipating the downfall of the Shah and subsequent persecution, sent family members to Los Angeles. The exodus continued into the early 1980s, with Iranians at that time having to sneak themselves and valuables out of the country. Among the several ethnic and religious groups represented by these Iranians, some Armenians settled in Glendale and were joined by Armenians from Lebanon. Others followed in classic chain migrations. Immigrants bought businesses and opened new ones, as well as Armenian schools and churches. As the Armenian presence in Glendale has grown steadily over recent decades, Latino numbers have declined. Armenians now comprise 32 percent of the city’s total population.
Koreans in Koreatown. This small area only a couple of miles west of Downtown is the single greatest focus of Korean life in the city. It contains a full range of businesses and services for Koreans, most of who travel in from outlying suburbs for work, shopping, health care, or other activities. Koreatown has seen much investment by Korean companies over several decades, but after 2000, construction of new apartments, office buildings, and stores, as well as continued renovations of older structures, really took off. At the same time more middle- and upper-class Korean families moved there from South Korea or from various Los Angeles suburbs. The area is residentially multiethnic, with Latinos typically in lower-rent apartments and Koreans, other Asians, and Whites in more expensive housing. With the intense gentrification and higher rental prices over the past decade, the percentage of Latinos has diminished and the percentage of Asians increased. Now, Koreans constitute about a third of the area’s population.
Downtown Enclaves
The following areas can be visited quite easily via Dash buses, which run every 7–10 minutes until 7 PM (only $.25 a ride). Go online or ask the concierge to show you the map of the Dash routes.
Chinatown. Initially developed in the 1930s as a focus for tourist shopping and a replacement for earlier Chinatowns, this newest Chinatown was mostly Cantonese until the 1960s. Then immigrants from different parts of China, Hong Kong and Taiwan began to arrive, and the late ‘70s saw an influx of Chinese from Southeast Asia. This latter group bought property, built shopping centers, and opened shops and restaurants so that by 1990 they owned the majority of businesses. They energized Chinatown economically, especially the section south of College Street. Altogether, Chinatown is quite multiethnic, with only two-thirds of its residents Chinese of one origin or another.
Chinatown contains fewer than two percent of the Chinese in the county, and its residents are poorer and less educated than Chinese elsewhere in the county. Although it’s convenient for tourists to visit Chinatown, it’s not typical of Chinese settlement in Los Angeles.
Little Tokyo. This area has been home to Japanese since the beginning of the 20th century except for the period of internment during World War II. Beginning in the 1970s, with the assistance of Japanese Americans and government subsidies, nearly all the old structures have been demolished to make room for the new hotels, banks, shopping centers, and apartment buildings visible today. Prior to the ‘70s, most Japanese in Los Angeles had moved to suburbs so that modern Little Tokyo has long been known more as a Japanese American cultural and commercial center than a place of residence. Visiting Japanese businessmen and tourists stay in Little Tokyo’s hotels, and its shops and restaurants are popular with Japanese and other residents of Los Angeles.
Further Exploration
We hope this brief introduction and the accompanying map have given you a taste of L.A.’s ethnic diversity and some of its patterns. Those wishing to learn about other ethnic groups and enclaves in L.A. can consult our book The Ethnic Quilt, which covers 34 different groups and is now available online at Professor Turner’s personal website.
James P. Allen, Professor Emeritus of Geography, California State University, Northridge
Eugene Turner, Professor, California State University, Northridge
LeRoy Myers, a former professor of geography and city planner, died Feb. 17, 2013. A native of Pennsylvania, Myers studied at Penn State where he earned his bachelor’s degree. He later graduated from the University of Michigan with a master’s in geography. As a professor of geography, he taught at Slippery Rock University and WVU. Myers also worked in city planning for the cities of Williamsport, Meadville, and Lima in Ohio.
LeRoy also served in the army during World War II. His love of travel took him to all of Europe and much of East Asia, Africa, and Australia. Myers had a talent for photography and served as a member of the Masonic Lodge.
He is survived by two step children (Susan Miller and David Swanson) and relatives in the Clintonville, Pa., area.
Every month the AAG compiles a list of newly-published books in geography and related areas. Some are selected for review in the AAG Review of Books.
Publishers are welcome to send new volumes to the Editor-in-Chief (Kent Mathewson, Editor-in-Chief, AAG Review of Books, Department of Geography and Anthropology, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70803).
Anyone interested in reviewing these or other titles should also contact the Editor-in-Chief.
April 2013
Approaches to Disaster Management: Examining the Implications of Hazards, Emergencies and Disasters. Tiefenbacher, John. Manhattan, NY: InTech 2013. $Free Electronic (ISBN 978-953-51-1093-4).
Asia Rising: Growth and Resilience in an Uncertain Global Economy. Hill, Hal and Maria Socorro Gochoco-Bautista, eds. Northampton, Mass: Edward Elgar 2013. $185 Cloth (ISBN 978-1-781-00797-6).
Becoming Melungeon: Making an Ethnic Identity in the Appalachian South. Schrift, Melissa. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press 2013. $35.00 Cloth (ISBN 978-0-8032-7154-8).
Defensive Environmentalists and the Dynamics of Global Reform. Rudel, Thomas K. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press 2013. $95.00 Cloth (ISBN 978-1-107-03052-7).
Everyday Las Vegas: Local Life in a Tourist Town. Rowley, Rex J. Reno, NV: University of Nevada Press 2013. $ Cloth (ISBN 978-0-87417-905-7).
Growing Resistance: Canadian Farmers and the Politics of Genetically Modified Wheat. Eaton, Emily. Winnipeg, MB: University of Manitoba Press 2013. $31.95 Paper (ISBN 978-0-88755-744-6).
History of Ancient Geography. Thomson, J. Oliver. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press 2013. $41.99 Paper (ISBN 978-1-107-68992-3).
Impossible Citizens: Dubai’s Indian Diaspora. Vora, Neha. Durham, NC: Duke University Press 2013. $24.95 Paper (ISBN 978-0-8223-5393-5).
Mark My Words: Native Women Mapping Our Nations. Goeman, Mishuana. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press 2013. $25.00 Paper (ISBN 978-0-8166-7791-7).
Potent Landscapes: Place and Mobility in Eastern Indonesia. Allerton, Catherine. Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai’I Press 2013. $25 Paper (ISBN 978-0-8248-3800-3).
Street Fight: The Politics of Mobility in San Francisco. Henderson, Jason. Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press 2013. $24.95 Paper (ISBN 978-1-55849-999-7).
The Hub’s Metropolis: Greater Boston’s Development from Railroad Suburbs to Smart Growth. O’Connell, James C.. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press 2013. $34.95 Cloth (ISBN 978-0-262-01875-3).
The View from Above: The Science of Social Space. Haffner, Jeanne. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press 2013. $32.00 Cloth (ISBN 978-0-262-01879-1).
The World of Lucha Libre: Secrets, Revelations, and Mexican National Identity. Levi, Heather. Durham, NC: Duke University Press 2008. $ Paper (ISBN 978-0-8223-4232-8).
Views of the Cordilleras and Monuments of the Indigenous Peoples of the Americas: A Critical Edition. von Humboldt, Alexander with Vera M. Kutzinski, and Ottmar Ette, eds. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press 2012. $65.00 Cloth (ISBN 978-0-226-86506-5).
Conservation Planning: Shaping the Future. Craighead, F. Lance and Charles L. Convis Jr. Redlands, CA: ESRI Press 2013. $1119.95 Paper (ISBN 978-1-58948-263-0).
Contested Water: The Struggle Against Water Privatization in the United States and Canada. Robinson, Joanna L. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press 2013. $23.00 Paper (ISBN 978-0-262-51039-0).
Getting to Know ArcGIS for Desktop, 3rd edition. Law, Michael and Amy Collins. Redlands, CA: ESRI Press 2013. $84.95 Paper (ISBN 978-1-58948-308-8).
Lining Up Data in ArcGIS:A Guide to Map Projections, Second Edition. Maher, Margaret M. Redlands, CA: ESRI Press 2013. $24.95 Paper (ISBN 978-1-58948-342-2).
Between Giants: The Battle for the Baltics in World War II. Buttar, Prit. Long Island City, NY: Osprey Publishing 2013. $29.95 Cloth (ISBN 978-1-78096-163-7).
Food and Society: Principles and Paradoxes. Guptill, Amy E., Denise A. Copelton, and Betsy Lucal. Malden, MA: Polity Books 2012. $23.95 Paper (ISBN 978-0-7456-7282-6).
Imperial Geographies in Byzantine and Ottoman Space. Bazzaz, Sahar, Yota Batsaki, and Dimiter Angelov. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press 2013. $24.95 Paper (ISBN 9780674066625).
Memorylands: Heritage and Identity in Europe Today. Macdonald, Sharon. New York, NY: Routledge 2013. $39.95 Paper (ISBN 978-0-415-45334-9).
Migration and Climate Change. Graeme Hugo, ed. Northampton, Mass: Edward Elgar 2013. $520 Cloth (ISBN 978-1-84980-851-4).
Race and Immigration in the New Ireland. Ulin, Julieann Veronica, Heather Edwards, and Sean O’Brien, eds. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press 2013. $35.00 Paper (ISBN 978-0-268-02777-3).
Transnational Migration. Faist, Thomas, Margit Fauser, and Eveline Reisenauer. Malden, MA: Polity Books 2013. $22.95 Paper (ISBN 978-0-7456-4978-8).
Traveling the 38th Parallel: A Water Line Around the World. Carle, David, and Janet Carle. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press 2013. $29.95 Cloth (ISBN 978-0-520-26654-4).
Regionalists on the Left: Radical Voices from the American West. Steiner, Michael C, ed. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press 2013. $39.95 Cloth (ISBN 9780806143408).
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New Books for Geographers
New Books: January 2013
Every month the AAG compiles a list of newly-published books in geography and related areas. Some are selected for review in the AAG Review of Books.
Publishers are welcome to send new volumes to the Editor-in-Chief (Kent Mathewson, Editor-in-Chief, AAG Review of Books, Department of Geography and Anthropology, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70803).
Anyone interested in reviewing these or other titles should also contact the Editor-in-Chief.
January 2013
Landscapes Beyond Land: Routes Aesthetics, Narratives. Árnason, Arnar, Nicolas Ellison, Jo Vergunst and Andrew Whitehouse, eds. New York, NY: Berghahn Books 2012. $65.00 Cloth (ISBN 9780857456717).
Migration and Development. Bakewell, Oliver, ed. Cheltenham, England: Edward Elgar Publishing 2012. $490.00 (ISBN 978-1-84980-970-2).
Immigration Dialectic: Imagining Community, Economy, and Nation. Bauder, Harald. Toronto, Canada: University of Toronto Press 2011. $35.00 (ISBN 978-1-442-61076-7).
Sugarlandia Revisited: Sugar and Colonialism in Asia and the Americas, 1800–1940. Bosma, Ulbe, Juan A. Giusti-Cordero, and G. Roger Knight, eds. New York, NY: Berghahn Books 2007. $29.95 Paper (ISBN 9781845457846).
Animism in Rainforest and Tundra: Personhood, Animals, Plants and Things in Contemporary Amazonia and Siberia. Brightman, Marc, Vanessa Elisa Grotti, and Olga Ulturgasheva, eds. New York, NY: Berghahn Books 2012. $90.00 Cloth (ISBN 9780857454683).
Roots of Brazil. Buarque de Holanda, Sergio. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press 2012. $28.00 (ISBN 978-0-268-02613-4).
Writing Food History: A Global Perspective. Claflin, Kyri W. and Scholliers, Peter, eds. New York, NY: Berg 2012. $39.95 (ISBN 978-1-84788-808-2).
A Secret History of Coffee, Coca & Cola. Cortes, Ricardo. New York, NY: Akashic Books 2012. $17.95 (ISBN 978-1-61775-134-9).
The Reindeer Botanist: Alf Erling Porsild, 1901–1977. Dathan, Wendy. Calgary, Canada: University of Calgary Press 2012. $51.95 (ISBN 978-1-55238-586-9).
The Locavore’s Dilema: In Praise of the 10,000-Mile Diet. Desrochers, Pierra and Shimizu, Hiroko. New York, NY: Public Affairs 2012. $26.99 (ISBN 978-1-28648-940-3).
The Population of the UK. Dorling, Daniel and Henning, Benjamin. London, England: Sage 2013. $45.00 (ISBN 978-1-4462-5297-0).
Signifying Europe. Fornäs, Johan. Bristol, England: Intellect Books 2013. $40.00 Paper (ISBN 9781841505213).
The Humn Shore: Seacoasts in History. Gillis, John R. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press 2012. $27.50 (ISBN 9780-226-92223-2).
Civilizing Nature: National Parks in Global Historic Perspective. Gissibl, Bernhard, Sabine Höhler, and Patrick Kupper eds. New York, NY: Berghahn Books 2012. $95.00 Cloth (ISBN 9780857455253).
Dictionary of American Regional English: Contrastive Maps, Index to Entry Labels, Questionnaire, and Fieldwork Data. Hall, Joan Houston and von Schneidemesser, Luanne, eds. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press 2013. $85.00 (ISBN 9780-67406-653-3).
Building a Market: The Rise of the Home Improvement Industry, 1914–1960. Harris, Richard. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press 2012. $45.00 (ISBN 978-0-226-31766-3).
Medieval Maps of the Holy Land. Harvey, P.D.A. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press 2013. $75.00 (ISBN 978-0-7123-5824-8).
The Scramble for the Amazon and the Lost Paradise of Eclides da Cunha. Hecht, Susanna B. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press 2013. $45.00 (ISBN 978-0-226-32281-0).
The Routledge Companion to Landscape Studies. Howard, Peter, Ian Thompson, and Emma Waterton. New York, NY: Routledge 2013. $205.00 (ISBN 978-0-415-68460-6).
Ecologies and Politics of Health. King, Brian and Kelley A. Crews, eds. New York, NY: Routledge 2013. $160.00 (ISBN 978-0-415-59066-2).
Landscape Archaeology between Art and Science: From a Multi- to an Interdisciplinary Approach. Kluiving, Sjoerd and Erika Guttmann-Bond. Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Amsterdam University Press 2013. $69.95 (ISBN 978-90-8964-418-3).
The Taste Culture Reader: Experiencing Food and Drink. Korsmeyer, Carolyn. New York, NY: Berg 2005. $35.95 (ISBN 978-1-84520-061-9).
The Paraguay Reader: History, Culture, Politics. Lambert, Peter and Andrew Nickson, eds. Durham, NC: Duke University Press 2013. $27.95 (ISBN 978-0-8223-5249-5).
Environment and Citizenship in Latin America: Natures, Subjects and Struggles. Latta, Alex, and Hannah Wittman, eds. New York, NY: Berghahn Books 2012. $70.00 Cloth (ISBN 9780857457479).
Slipping Away: Banana Politics and Fair Trade in the Eastern Caribbean. Moberg, Mark. New York, NY: Berghahn Books 2008. $32.95 Paper (ISBN 9781845451974).
Between Ruin and Restoration: An Environmental History of Israel. Orenstein, Daniel E., Alon Tal, and Char Miller, eds. Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press 2013. $27.95 Paper (ISBN 978-0-8229-6222-9).
Eat Drink Delta: A Hungry Traveler’s Journey Through the Soul of the South. Puckett, Susan. London, England: Yale University Press 2013. $24.95 (ISBN 978-0-8203-4425-6).
Arcadian America: The Death and Life of an Environmental Tradition. Sachs, Aaron. London, England: Yale University Press 2013. $35.00 (ISBN 978-0-300-17640-7).
The Disappearing South: Studies in Regional Change and Continuity. Steed, Robert P., Laurence W. Moreland, and Tod A. Baker, eds. Tuscaloosa, AL: University of Alabama Press 2012. $29.95 Paper (ISBN 9780817357450).
Africa South of the Sahara: a Geographical Interpretation, 3rd Edition. Stock, Robert. New York, NY: Guilford Press 2012. $75.00 (ISBN 978-1-60623-992-6).
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John B. Rehder
John B. Rehder of the University of Tennessee, Knoxville (UTK) has died at the age of 68. He was a cherished teacher and colleague in the UTK geography department and a well-known figure on the UTK campus, where he had taught since 1967. Rehder earned both a master’s degree (1965) and a Ph.D. from Louisiana State University (1971) and a bachelor’s degree from East Carolina University (1964).
A historical and cultural geographer, Rehder’s research focused on material folk culture as reflected in traditional architecture in the American South. A distinguished author, two of his books received prestigious awards. Delta Sugar:Louisiana’s Vanishing Plantation Landscape (1999) received the Vernacular Architecture Forum’s Abbott Lowell Cummings Award in 2000. Rehder was later presented with the Pioneer America Society’s Fred B. Kniffen Book Award for AppalachianFolkways (2004), a detailed account of southern Appalachia and its cultural milieu. Both books were published by Johns Hopkins University Press. TennesseeLog Buildings: A Folk Tradition is due to be published by the University of Tennessee Press in November of 2012.
John B. Rehder (Necrology). 2012. AAG Newsletter 47(7): 30.
W. Rhoads Murphey III, died of pneumonia on December 20, 2012, at his home in Ann Arbor, Mich. He was 93. A professor emeritus of the University of Michigan’s Department of History, Murphey arrived in 1964 as a professor of Asian studies and geography. He retired in 1990, but continued to write, teach and advise undergraduate students. He stayed as the director the university’s Asian studies program until it was reorganized in 1996.
Murphey was a four-time graduate of Harvard University, receiving his A.B. in history magna cum laude in 1941 and his M.A. in history in 1942. After World War II, he earned an M.A. in international and regional studies in 1948 and his Ph.D. in Far Eastern history and geography in 1950.
He enlisted during the war as a conscientious objector and served with the British Friends Ambulance Unit in China from 1942 to 1946. Although not a Quaker, Murphey attended a Friends School in his hometown of Philadelphia. That environment shaped his belief that “killing wouldn’t solve anything.” He resolved, however, to assist against the threat of the Axis powers. In the ambulance unit, Murphey and an international group of men drove old, charcoal-powered Chevrolet trucks throughout southwest China with medical supplies.
In traveling to such places as Kunming, Chunking, Yenan, Hanoi, Hong Kong and Shanghai, Murphey met Chiang Kai-Shek and Mao Tse-Tung. Hong Kong was just an “outpost of colonialism,” Murphey recalled, and nothing like the huge metropolis that it became in post-war history.
After finishing his doctorate, Murphey joined the department of geography at the University of Washington, Seattle, in 1952. He departed for the University of Pennsylvania in 1957, but returned the following year to the University of Washington. He remained there until heading to Michigan.
Murphey wrote more than 84 works in 218 publications, with translations into seven languages. He concentrated on history and geography drawn from his experiences in China and South Asia. His books included Shanghai: Key to Modern China (1953) and The Outsiders: Westerners in India and China (1977), the latter of which won a best book of the year award from the University of Michigan Press.
The University of Michigan gave Murphey its highest honor, the Distinguished Service Award, in 1974. Murphey also accepted AAG Honors in 1980.
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