San Francisco: A Cultural and Literary History

Portada
Signal Books, 2004 - 254 páginas
Within a generation San Francisco grew from an isolated Mexican trading post with more hills than people into America's major Pacific Coast city. Shaped by entrepreneurs, eccentrics, and visionaries, it became renowned for accommodating those who dared to be different. People as diverse as William Randolph Hearst, Lillie Coit, Carol Doda, Jerry Garcia, and Harvey Milk have thrived in San Francisco's permissive environment as it evolved into one of the world's most welcoming and visually stunning cities. Mick Sinclair explores gold-rush San Francisco and the early free-for-all that led to corruption, vigilantism and public hangings. Looking at the mansions of Nob Hill and the notorious Barbary Coast with its spiked drinks and opium-laced cigars, he reveals a city of pleasure and promiscuity. Through literature, music and popular culture, he considers the rise of Berkeley's student activism, the genesis of hippie culture and Haight-Ashbury's famous Summer of Love. Explaining how the Castro became the world's most famous gay neighborhood, he reveals how a booming internet economy transformed and then threatened to destroy the city. THE CITY OF LANDMARKS: the Golden Gate Bridge; the Tr
 

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INTRODUCTION
1
PART
22
PART THREE
53
Newspapers and Their Owners 96 William Randolph Hearsts Examiner 99
99
PART FOUR
105
126 Golden Gate Bridge 1937 130 Treasure Island 1939 134
134
PART FIVE
140
A Mission 142 The Mission District 146 Chinatown 150 A
162
Leidesdorff and Mary Ellen Pleasant 165 The Rise of the Fillmore 168 Black
174
PART
180
A New Battle 222 Queer Capital of the World 225
225
FURTHER READING 239
239
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