Description

Book Synopsis
How the relief and rebuilding efforts after the 1906 disaster reproduced the class and racial divisions of pre-quake San Francisco

Trade Review
"Davies uses the 1906 disaster as a lens through which to ask hard questions about the social and political life of San Francisco. She successfully weaves together the intricate stories of ordinary people's struggles and daily lives with high politics, urban history, and analyses of race, class, and gender. Important, smart, and crisply written, Saving San Francisco is both forceful and lively, and Davies's Epilogue about master disaster narratives is a graceful, moving close to what will become 'the' book on this subject for years to come." - Barbara Berglund, Associate Professor of History at the University of South Florida and author of Making San Francisco American: Cultural Frontiers in the Urban West, 1846-1906 "Saving San Francisco makes an original contribution to San Francisco history and to the study of how cities respond to natural disasters. Davies has written the first systematic social and political history of the recovery efforts after the earthquake and fire of 1906. Using a rich variety of archival evidence, including an excellent selection of personal stories, she contributes to both social welfare and Progressive Era scholarship. This is a convincing revisionist account that shows how the recovery process was shaped by existing gender, class, and racial fault lines in San Francisco society." -William Issel, Professor of History Emeritus at San Francisco State University and coauthor (with Robert W. Cherny) of San Francisco, 1865-1932: Politics, Power, and Urban Development

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Introduction 1 Points of Origin: Crises across the City 2 Disaster Relief: Local Troubles, National Solutions 3 Disastrous Opportunities: Unofficial Disaster Relief 4 Disaster Relief Camps: The Public Home of Private Life 5 The New San Francisco Epilogue: Disaster Remnants Appendix: Tables Notes Bibliography Index

Saving San Francisco

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    A Hardback by Andrea Rees Davies


      View other formats and editions of Saving San Francisco by Andrea Rees Davies

      Publisher: Temple University Press,U.S.
      Publication Date: 1/11/2011 12:11:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781439904329, 978-1439904329
      ISBN10: 1439904324

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      How the relief and rebuilding efforts after the 1906 disaster reproduced the class and racial divisions of pre-quake San Francisco

      Trade Review
      "Davies uses the 1906 disaster as a lens through which to ask hard questions about the social and political life of San Francisco. She successfully weaves together the intricate stories of ordinary people's struggles and daily lives with high politics, urban history, and analyses of race, class, and gender. Important, smart, and crisply written, Saving San Francisco is both forceful and lively, and Davies's Epilogue about master disaster narratives is a graceful, moving close to what will become 'the' book on this subject for years to come." - Barbara Berglund, Associate Professor of History at the University of South Florida and author of Making San Francisco American: Cultural Frontiers in the Urban West, 1846-1906 "Saving San Francisco makes an original contribution to San Francisco history and to the study of how cities respond to natural disasters. Davies has written the first systematic social and political history of the recovery efforts after the earthquake and fire of 1906. Using a rich variety of archival evidence, including an excellent selection of personal stories, she contributes to both social welfare and Progressive Era scholarship. This is a convincing revisionist account that shows how the recovery process was shaped by existing gender, class, and racial fault lines in San Francisco society." -William Issel, Professor of History Emeritus at San Francisco State University and coauthor (with Robert W. Cherny) of San Francisco, 1865-1932: Politics, Power, and Urban Development

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments Introduction 1 Points of Origin: Crises across the City 2 Disaster Relief: Local Troubles, National Solutions 3 Disastrous Opportunities: Unofficial Disaster Relief 4 Disaster Relief Camps: The Public Home of Private Life 5 The New San Francisco Epilogue: Disaster Remnants Appendix: Tables Notes Bibliography Index

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