Sometime in the mid-nineties, when I was an undergraduate at U.C. Berkeley, a guest lecturer visited my U.S. history class. It was one of those massive survey lectures with about five hundred students, many of us there to check a requirement rather than follow an academic passion. The guestās name was Mike Davis, and his subject was Los Angeles. The hour began with a story about Aimee Semple McPherson, a charismatic evangelist and early-twentieth-century pioneer of media celebrity, who established a base of ardent believers in the city back when it was only sparsely populated. I can still hear the way Davis said her name, as though repeating it enough times offered some key to understanding the huckster promises that drew some people to L.A. It ended with a look at the recently completed headquarters of the Beverly Hills Police Departmentāa gleaming fortress, a monument to state power. Throughout the lecture, I remember being unable to move, transfixed by the torrent of ideas, all the dots being connected, this new way of seeing the world around me. After class, I skipped down to a bookstore near campus and bought āCity of Quartz,ā Davisās 1990 book about Los Angeles as both āutopia and dystopia.ā What he taught us that day was not history; it was a way of digging through the ruins of the past to see the future.
Davis passed away this week, from esophageal cancer, at the age of seventy-six. He was born in 1946 in Fontana, California, in San Bernardino County, to working-class parents who had hitchhiked to California from Ohio. He was raised in El Cajon, just outside of San Diego. He was a curious student but an itinerant one. His education was interruptedāor rather, augmentedāby stints as a truck driver, a bookseller, and a tour-bus driver, experiences that drew him into the world of activism, organizing, and Marxist thinking. Upon finishing his undergraduate education, at U.C.L.A., in the mid-seventies, he pursued but never completed the requirements for his Ph.D. He took a path of teaching, editing,Ā writing, and labor organizing. In the early eighties, he spent six years in the U.K. and served as an editor of theĀ New Left Review, before returning to Southern California.
āCity of Quartzā drew on his graduate work, but, as he joked in the bookās acknowledgments, there were āno research grants, sabbaticals, teaching assistants or other fancy ingredientsā here. His style ran afoul of academic conventions. In retrospect, this was a failing of the system, not Davis. In the eighties, Los Angeles was an object of fascination to scholars and thinkers such as the geographer Edward Soja, the literary critic Fredric Jameson, and the sociologist Jean Baudrillard, for whom a downtown hotel or mazy highway interchange held great symbolic heft. What made āCity of Quartzā so breathtaking was that Davis tried to write about Los Angeles as a totalityāfrom the real-estate deals of the mega-rich to the waste-treatment plants, the power brokers to the unhoused and dispossessed, from the glamour of Hollywood to the cryptic graffiti of street gangs. Even those who decried his bombastic tone or his looseness with fact-checking could not deny the scale of his ambition.
Part of Davisās achievement is that he understood Los Angeles from the periphery, not from a place of entitlement. āThe world that experientially I was familiar with,ā he explained, in 1993, āis that kind of blue-collar margin between the city and the desert. . . . I know a lot about the chaos of that, and I know what the city looks like from that kind of perspective. I know that the region consists of one hundred small towns or communities, that itās a mosaic of those, and that, though L.A.ās the most visualized, endlessly represented place in the world, you generally keep seeing the same thing over and over and over again.ā
āCity of Quartzā was a surprise best-seller. In 1998, Davis was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship, known commonly as a āgeniusā grant; that year, he published āEcology of Fear: Los Angeles and the Imagination of Disaster.ā It reminded readers that his mission was to provide us with a map, an architectural tour, an argument about space as much as time. Throughout the two-thousands, he published extensively on how capitalism had remade our cities and, consequently, narrowed our sense of what was possible. To organize the masses would take more than conveying stories about policing and repression: Davis wanted to teach people a new way of seeing. Read him and youāll notice the surveillance cameras, the barbed wire, the way the built environment might try to actively diminish us. You recognize the neurosis of the powerful, the insecurity that necessitates that a government building look like a garrison. You marvel at the scale of Davisās ideas, as well as the community meetings, hearings, demonstrations, marches, letter-writing campaigns, and conversations among fellow-travellers that inspired his thinking.
Today, Davisā influence reverberates among political activists, geographers and city planners, and academics alike. The photographer Brian (B+) Cross was a student of Davisās at CalArts in the early nineties. He recalls Davis encouraging him to capture Los Angelesā burgeoning independent hip-hop scene, which resulted in one of the finest books ever written on the subject, āItās Not About a Salary: Rap, Race, and Resistance in Los Angeles.ā Often misread as a āprophet of doom,ā Davis was actually an optimist and a dreamer. He wasnāt gloating about the end of the world, so much as he was compelling us to imagine a new one. āWhat keeps us going, ultimately,ā he explained toĀ theĀ GuardianĀ in an interview earlier this year, āis our love for each other, and our refusal to bow our heads, to accept the verdict, however all-powerful it seems. Itās what ordinary people have to do. You have to love each other. You have to defend each other. You have to fight.ā
Davis had been battling cancer for more than five years when, this summer, he decided to stop chemotherapy and enter palliative care. Admirers and acolytes began sharing tributes to his influence and generosity, the way he opened his home to local activists, aspiring journalists, graduate students. He was a firebrand, cantankerous at times, funny in private, unflagging in his faith. A leftist and a Californian. He told the Los AngelesĀ TimesĀ that he regretted dying this way, rather thanĀ āin battle or at a barricade as Iāve always romantically imagined.āĀ His books were so prophetic about the nature of terror. We must also trust that he was right to have faith in the futureāin those who followed.
Around the time I first started reading Davis, I went to Los Angeles for spring break. Berkeley wasāand probably always will beāthe type of school where students routinely spend these breaks organizing rather than going to the beach, and mine was spent with other members of a recruitment-and-retention group, driving around Los Angeles in a rental van talking to high-school students about their futures. One night, driving around a city few of us knew, I sensed we were in Beverly Hills. There was the police station that Davis had mentioned in his lecture. It was sublime, the gleaming fortress in the dead of night. You wanted to tear it all down, only where to begin. We admired it for a moment and ran back to the van to keep driving, because we had places to go, things we had to do.
ZNetwork is funded solely through the generosity of its readers.
Donate
