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Set the Night on Fire: L.A in the Sixties
Mike Davis
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Description for Set the Night on Fire: L.A in the Sixties
Paperback.
Histories of the US sixties invariably focus on New York City, but Los Angeles was an epicenter of that decade's political and social earthquake. L.A. was a launchpad for Black Power-where Malcolm X and Angela Davis first came to prominence and the Watts uprising shook the nation-and home to the Chicano walkouts and Moratorium, as well as birthplace of 'Asian America' as a political identity, base of the antiwar movement, and of course, centre of California counterculture.
Mike Davis and Jon Wiener provide the first comprehensive movement history of L.A. in the sixties, drawing on extensive archival research, scores ... Read moreof interviews with principal figures of the 1960s movements, and personal histories (both Davis and Wiener are native Los Angelenos). Following on from Davis's award-winning L.A. history, City of Quartz, Set the Night on Fire is a fascinating historical corrective, delivered in scintillating and fiercely elegant prose. Show Less
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London, United Kingdom
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About Mike Davis
Mike Davis is the author of several books including City of Quartz, The Monster at Our Door, Buda's Wagon, and Planet of Slums. He is the recipient of the MacArthur Fellowship and the Lannan Literary Award.Jon Wiener is Host and Producer of Start Making Sense, the Nation's weekly podcast. He is an Emeritus Professor of US history at UC Irvine, ... Read moreand his most recent book is How We Forgot the Cold War: A Historical Journey across America. Show Less
Reviews for Set the Night on Fire: L.A in the Sixties
This huge and exhilarating work of history aims to restore some depth and accuracy to how we talk about Los Angeles in the 1960s ... Davis and Wiener have created an important book to read in a time where LA needs more than ever to be mobilized.
John Freeman
Lit Hub, Most Anticipated Books of 2020
The ... Read morefamiliar, monochromatic picture of Los Angeles in the sixties - all Hollywood pop and Didion ennui - required a million people of African, Asian, and Mexican ancestry to be 'edited out of utopia,' as Mike Davis and Jon Wiener put it. What those people actually did, alongside antiwar feminists, high school students, and others, is the heart of this book, and it's a big heart. No one could tell these intersecting stories better than Davis and Wiener, and their book gives us back a great city's greatness in its movements, edges, and other centers, so many of them forgotten.
Rebecca Solnit, author of Recollections of My Nonexistence From the Ash Grove to Aztlán, from the Valley to Vietnam, it's all here. In showing how struggles for free health care, adequate housing, functional schools, racial and sexual liberation, new forms of creativity, and the human right of freedom from brutal police violence came together into a mighty torrent, Wiener and Davis have written a revolutionary history for an age of continuing contradictions.
Daniel Widener, author of Black Arts West The great task of Set the Night on Fire is to remedy the erasures of the black, brown, and queer activists who put their bodies on the line. Revolutionary artist-nuns, educator-organizers, and free-jazz radicals are just a few of a vast cast that together paint a stirring portrait of a visionary city ever emerging from the shadows of the old order. Viva Los Angeles Libre!
Rubén Martínez, author of Desert America This is not the theme park of mansions, beaches, and glitzed-up noir, but the undercity of outsiders struggling to get out from under the savage police to stake out a place in the sun. A rare and necessary saga of unsung heroes, vicious authorities, and unpunished crimes.
Todd Gitlin, author of The Sixties This is history from below, in the very best sense. A magnificent mural of the local sixties, written with verve and passion by two of my favorite locals.
Barbara Ehrenreich, author of Natural Causes A richly detailed portrait of a city that seethed with rebellious energy.
Kirkus Reviews
Set the Night on Fire fixes on one mission - collate the stories of emancipation struggle in '60s LA - and runs with it, using document research to complete the job. This is the approach Davis has been using in the twenty-first century, and it works.
Sasha Frere-Jones
Bookforum
An indispensable portrait of an unexplored chapter in the history of American progressivism.
Publishers Weekly
Insightful and innovative...Set the Night on Fire: L.A. in the Sixties is both a fierce political and cultural history and a geographic corrective.
William Deverell
Alta
Authoritative and impressive...Set the Night on Fire is an essential reference to L.A.'s rich history of civil unrest, with a hopeful undercurrent. Movements can and often do force change.
Erik Himmelsbach-Weinstein
Los Angeles Times
A monumental history of rebellion and resistance.
Los Angeles Review of Books
Combining comprehensive, mineshaft-deep research with unique firsthand knowledge, [Davis and Wiener's] recounting of the radical '60s in Los Angeles will likely not be surpassed.
Jerald Podair
Los Angeles Review of Books
Set the Night on Fire: L.A. in the Sixties is a book as vast as the city itself.
Ron Jacobs
CounterPunch
Monumental...For new generations growing up in a city whose very history is rarely acknowledged to exist, Set the Night on Fire is a vital primer in resistance, a gift to the future from the past.
Ben Ehrenreich
Guardian
These are war stories, the intended audience of which is the young organizers of today, many of them the children and grandchildren of his friends and heroes in the sixties.
Dana Goodyear
New Yorker
Anyone familiar with Mike Davis's magisterial social history of Los Angeles, City of Quartz, will know what to expect in terms of the epic sweep and questioning tone of Set the Night on Fire. This time, the focus is firmly on race and rebellion, but he and Wiener also map out the myriad protest movements, countercultural voices and campaigns that made 1960s Los Angeles an altogether more edgy and volatile city than the state's hippy capital, San Francisco.
Sean O'Hagan
Guardian
Davis and Wiener have crafted a book that is both encyclopedic and prophetic, scholarly and polemical...Readers would be hard-pressed to find better guides for a tour of leftist Los Angeles.
Sean Dempsey, S.J.
America magazine
This very readable but meticulously detailed year-by-year account has relevance far beyond its time and place. The sixties were a decade that shaped politics for half a century and the authors show how different struggles were interlinked across the US.
Glyn Robbins
Morning Star
An essential rescued history
New York Journal of Books
Mike Davis and Jon Wiener tell the story of a decade of explosions.
Meagan Day
Jacobin
In Set the Night on Fire, Mike Davis and Jon Wiener provide an extensive history of L.A. that includes interviews with key players from these movements and their own personal recollections.
Danielle Bauter
Los Angeles Daily News
Highly readable...Davis and Wiener succeed in giving renewed attention to the neglected voices of subjugated minorities central to the reconstruction of society.
LSE Review of Books
An astonishing book that proves that people really do have the power to force change for the better.
Buzz Magazine
A remarkably well-researched volume, which chronologically itemises each and every twist and turn in the muddled patchwork of American history
KCW London An exhaustive and in-depth presentation of the wide-ranging big and small resistance movements of [the sixties] with a sober and insightful account of their strengths and weaknesses, including the role that the political left played in them. Its publication in 2020 could not be more timely in these days when tens of thousands have been demonstrating in Los Angeles and across the country and world against police brutality and racism.
Samuel Farber
Jacobin
A history of the social and political struggles of the 1960s unlike most others.
The VVA Veteran
Monumental...Set the Night on Fire is, above all, a historical account of how a rainbow of insurgent social movements tried to peel back the glitter, dismantle the police state, and replace elite white rule and its regimes of segregation, militarism, patriarchy, and conformity with a society oriented toward "serving the people."
Robin D. G. Kelley
Boston Review
Two veteran authors allow themselves vast detail to tell us about the cradle of counterculture, in all the far-flung rebellious meanings of the term. It is also the story of L.A.'s contested racial space, with contradictions ranging from radicalized white youngsters in the suburban sprawl to Chicano Teamsters breaking strikes.
Paul Buhle
Rain Taxi
Set the Night on Fire is a sort of bequeathal from one generation of activists to another.
Mother Jones
Timely...We can do more than repeat the past; we can also learn from it. That gives reason for hope and as Set the Night on Fire makes clear, hope has always been Leviathan's great antagonist.
Times Literary Supplement
An invigorating and inspiring read
Morning Star
Set the Night on Fire is a revelatory history of Los Angeles in the 1960s, undermining pervasive media myths of the era.
Alex Ross
Wall Street Journal
A page-turning survey of social movement activism in 1960s Los Angeles...Set the Night on Fire is a serious, informative book that is also a pleasurable, fun, and inspiring read.
Andrew S. Baer
Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books
Essential and long overdue.
David Ulin
Los Angeles Times ("Best California books of 2020")
An invigorating and inspiring read
Morning Star
Set the Night on Fire aims to dislodge the popular conception of sixties radicalism as the terrain of white Berkeley hippies and New Left agitators. Instead, Blacks, Latinos, high-school students, and unreconstructed communists were at the center of the city's struggles against segregation and police impunity.
John Thomason
Commonweal Magazine
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