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Boom: New UC Press Journal


The University of California Press Journals division announced the forthcoming publication of Boom: A Journal of California, a new peer-reviewed, quarterly journal dedicated to social, political, and cultural issues in the Golden State.

Edited by Carolyn de la Peña, Associate Professor of American Studies at UC Davis and Director of the Davis Humanities Institute, and Louis Warren, UC Davis’ W. Turrentine Jackson Professor of Western U.S. History, Boom will bring in-depth intellectual study of California to a wide audience, and inspire discussion about California's past, present, and future. Each issue will feature thoughtful and provocative articles by a range of contributors, from researchers and scholars to writers and photographers.

Boom breaks new ground in California studies, and has global relevance: "One in eight residents of the U.S. lives in California, and the state has become an unprecedented cultural, economic, and political force in the U.S. and abroad. And yet, no journal has explored the origins and meaning of today's California in an interdisciplinary and intellectual way. With Boom, we aim to fix that," said Warren. 

The new journal also addresses a need for a greater understanding of California: “To truly grapple with the crisis facing California, we have to gather new knowledge about who we are, how we got here, and what common ground can be built for the future. By featuring the work of researchers in multiple fields and combining that with community voices, we believe Boom will uncover fresh perspectives on the state we're in,” de la Peña said.

Boom's debut issue will appear in February 2011.

Boom is made possible in part by a generous grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. “We are deeply grateful to the Mellon Foundation for fostering scholarship in California Studies at this critical moment,” said University of California Press Director Lynne Withey.

Read the press release announcing the new UC Press journal Boom: A Journal of California.

September 24, 2009 in California & The West, UC Press News | Permalink | Comments (0)

Technorati Tags: Boom: A Journal of California, California, UC Press, UC Press Journals

Jean Pfaelzer in The Globalist: Are Apologies Enough?

DrivenoutIn 1882, the US passed the Chinese Exclusion Act, declaring a ten-year ban on labor immigration from China. It was the first major US law to limit immigration, and a marker of the anti-Chinese racism that permeated the American West. For decades before and after the Exclusion Act, Chinese Americans fought back against violence, roundups, and pogroms in California and other western states—a resistance movement that included California's earliest workers' strikes and the largest act of mass civil disobedience to this day, as Jean Pfaelzer shows in Driven Out: The Forgotten War Against Chinese Americans. The Chinese Exclusion Act stayed in place until December 17, 1943, when Congress officially repealed it. In 2009 the state of California apologized for the decades of state-sponsored discrimination against Chinese Americans, and established December 17 as an official Day of Inclusion. In a two-part series in The Globalist, titled "Equality Is Never Having to Say You Are Sorry", Pfaelzer examines this and other government efforts to atone for the past, and questions whether apologies are enough.

Read Part I and Part II of Jean Pfaelzer's "Equality Is Never Having to Say You Are Sorry" on The Globalist website.

September 10, 2009 in California & The West, History | Permalink | Comments (0)

Interview with author Stephen Trimble

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Bargaining for Eden, Stephen Trimble's newest book, follows citizens in two communities grappling with change on extraordinary public lands in their backyards. Conflict grows from the tension between grassroots values and greed, politics, ownership, and patriarchy. First comes Mount Ogden and the history of the Public-Lands West, from overused commons to reclaimed national forest to ski area—all community-based. The beloved ski area then loses its sense of community as the mountain develops into a resort that hosts the Salt Lake City Winter Olympics. The lens for this story is billionaire resort owner Earl Holding, whose power and money bring him what he wants, despite the anger and agony of local people trying to preserve their special relationship with the mountain.


A version of the following interview with Trimble on Bargaining for Eden originally ran in the July/August 2008 issue of The Bloomsbury Review.


Much of Bargaining for Eden circles around a wealthy and powerful man named Earl Holding. Why is he important—what does his story tell us about our contemporary relationships to the land?

Before we turn to Earl, pause for just a moment.  Think about a place you love—from your childhood or coming of age—and tell me whether it looks the same now as it did when you first came to know this place.  Now, replay the chain of events that created this change.  Did we make decisions consciously or did we take your beloved place for granted—and then, to our regret, suddenly recognize our loss?  In Bargaining for Eden I explore these transformations in our home landscapes, using two stories as archetypes.    
    Earl Holding becomes my symbol of the heavy-handed power that drives this change.  While the rest of us stand in a circle and squabble over the future of lands we all love, Earl and his friends sweep in and take what they want, often before the rest of us even know what has happened.  It’s the universal script shrinking the last open spaces of America.
       And so who is Earl?  Every town in America has someone like him, a fabulously successful entrepreneur whose power grows—straightforwardly—from money and connection, whose desires often trump community interest.  He isn’t as destructive as many other tycoons, but he usually gets his way. This makes me crazy, but I’m an irredeemable optimist, and so I’m convinced that we can retreat from the brink.
    Earl Holding grew up poor just a few blocks from my family’s home in Salt Lake City—a generation earlier than my own childhood in Denver.  But the Interior West is really just one huge small town strung out along our highways.  As we all do, Earl carries his youthful connections with him along those roads.  A childhood friend of his is now the president and prophet of the Mormon Church.  Other neighborhood boys have manned the Utah congressional delegation for decades.  Dick Cheney records the video tribute when Earl wins an award. 
    Earl Holding is a recluse and an eccentric—and a forceful member of the inner circle of power in Mormon Country.  He owns the Little America hotel chain, Sinclair Oil, Sun Valley and Snowbasin ski resorts, and 500,000 acres of land in the West.  He is now worth nearly $5 billion, which makes him the 77th richest American on the 2008 Forbes 400 list.

What happened at Snowbasin, according to one of Earl’s opponents, was “a museum of improprieties.” What were those improprieties?

My chronicle starts in 1997, when I drove up the winding road on Mount Ogden for the first time, on a travel story assignment to photograph Snowbasin before the Salt Lake City Winter Olympics arrived and the funky ski area in northern Utah became a mega-resort.  This place reminded me of the little Colorado areas where I learned to ski in the Sixties.  Within weeks of my visit, however, massive change would begin to transform Snowbasin.  As a writer, I knew there was a good story buried in that mountain.
    I started with an idea for a book centered on the Olympics.  I asked a simple question: “What will it take to bring an Olympic downhill racer on Mount Ogden down to the finish line in 2002?”  I knew that the answers to that question would lead me far beyond the actual construction of the racecourse into the story of the mountain itself—into the history of skiing in North America and the evolution of the Public-Lands West, and, finally, to the transformation of Snowbasin from old-fashioned local ski area to corporate showplace and the resulting loss of community. All these threads lead toward one fundamental question about our relationship with landscape: what is a mountain for?
    As I did my best to report that story, scene by scene, character by character, I found Earl Holding looming everywhere.  He wanted to craft his own version of the mountain.  And the United States Congress gave him what he wanted—by passing a bill to privatize public lands in the national forest at the base of Snowbasin.  To make that happen, Earl used the Olympics as an excuse.  And nearly every institution he confronted fell in line.
    I didn’t set out to write a biography of Earl Holding.  I simply began asking questions about the future of a mountain—Mount Ogden—and Earl appeared in nearly every answer.  So I felt obliged to engage with him, to do my best to understand his values.
    The arrogance and privilege wielded by Earl and his people constitute that long chain of “improprieties” mourned by Gale Dick, the co-founder of Save Our Canyons, the hometown defender of the wild Wasatch Range.

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How important is the Mormon religion to Utah politics and culture?

Two-thirds of Utah citizens still have Mormon roots, and I believe that their cultural values of obedience and patriarchy make it easier for politicians and powerful businesspeople to have their way; that the tight circles connecting people through heritage and childhood and Sunday worship make dissent difficult; and that development is seen as inherently good.  Rural Mormons still believe they are on a mission from their god to make the desert blossom as the rose.

The writer Tim Cahill once said that “every good story has a bastard.”  Is Earl your bastard, your bad guy? 

I know what Tim Cahill means.  Conflict holds the reader.  And there was no lack of conflict on Mount Ogden.  But the “evil” Earl, the one-dimensional bad guy that my grassroots conservationist characters compare to Hitler, isn’t as interesting as the Earl I found.
    Earl loves to win, to own.  He loves to make deals.  He is a breathtakingly good businessman.  But he isn’t necessarily the most villainous character in the story.  Gray Reynolds, who shepherded Earl’s land trade bill through Congress while deputy chief of the Forest Service and then changed allegiance to work for Earl, might be a bigger villain, though his motivation turns out to be surprisingly bland.   Gray loves to ski and believes that the bigger the resort, the better.
    Like Gray Reynolds, I love to ski. My lifelong affection for skiing was the spark for this book.  I became intrigued with the construction of the downhill course at Snowbasin, in part, because I had fantasized about Olympic downhills ever since I watched Robert Redford in Downhill Racer when I was a teenager!   And so I must confront my own inconsistencies as I gleefully ski the big mountain, forced to acknowledge that I am helping to support the greed and corporatization that homogenizes the joyous localism of skiing before I retreat with relief to my favorite old-fashioned ski area!
    So we’re all bastards.  Paradox makes a better story than a rant.

Can you talk about how you grant your characters complexity and humanity, and, in Earl’s case, without ever interviewing him?

I tried repeatedly to reach Earl Holding directly—and when that didn’t work, through his secretary, staff, and children.  His corporate spokesperson talked with me, but not Earl.  As I contrived to place myself in his path, one friend accused me of being a stalker.  Earl’s 2002 stroke softened him, but my phone still didn’t ring.  He really had no good reason to talk with me.
    I shook hands with Earl once, but I chose not to confront him when I had the chance.  I realized that I could create him as a character, that he was most interesting as a remote and unreachable symbol.  That’s how he appears in our lives.  And so I worked with anecdote and reputation to construct Earl as a myth that illuminates the one-sided impact of power on relationships—between individuals, within communities, and between people and the land.   I’m sure Earl would take issue with some of the details and stories I’ve written.  But these are the stories people believe to be true.  I’m most interested in how the community perceives him.
    I spoke with people who worked on the Snowbasin land trade at high levels in the Clinton administration, and I spoke with a woman named Margot Smelzer in her living room in Huntsville, where she decided to fight Earl because she genuinely believed in the sacred nature of the public trust—an ethic she learned from her old-time forester father.  In the end, I came close to knowing, moment by moment, just how we make our decisions about these places we all share, just how implacable are the politics of power.  I was moved by the dedication to old-fashioned citizenship of the people who loved the mountain rising from their backyard and by the decency of the public servants in the Federal agencies.  Many who work for Earl share a love for the same places.  Again and again, I discovered that the good guys and bad guys are not so sharply delineated as we might think.
    People I’ve actually interviewed and observed carry their own inconsistencies and confusions along with their passions, and this is what leads to the mix of courage and boldness and missed chances and inaction and selfishness that constitutes history.
    Earl is not my enemy.  He is not my nemesis.  I am not obsessed with him.  He is, quite simply, my character.  He came with the mountain.  And I since I’ve had this intimate relationship with him for years as a character, I call him Earl.

One of the opponents of Holding’s land-swap and development of Snowbasin, Jim Kilburn, was so deeply upset by the construction up on Mount Ogden that one day he climbed a lift chair, tied himself in, and shot himself.  This is a shocking and poignant story.  Did Jim Kilburn really intend his suicide to be a protest against Holding’s hubris?

It’s a troubling question that I keep asking myself, too—and this is the most controversial story in the book.  How much did Earl’s unyielding drive to transform Snowbasin trigger Jim’s decision to take his life?  Jim Kilburn was an alcoholic, but he was also a much-loved and charismatic man.  He hated what was happening at Snowbasin.  Jim’s friends agree that his lifelong emotional troubles finally overwhelmed him.  They also absolutely believe that his final act was, in part, an act of defiance to give meaning to his death.

Earl doesn’t always win.  Can you tell us the story of that florist in Salt Lake City who fought Earl and won?

Earl Holding‘s extravagant monument to hotel-keeping is the five-diamond Grand America in downtown Salt Lake City.  The hotel fills an over-sized block, except for one corner, where Earl’s granite walls must jog around an unassuming flower shop because its manager, Mac Livingston, fought Earl to a standstill—preventing him from receiving public funds for his development and refusing to sell him the land.  Mac was born to be a character—a western Don Quixote, born in Freedom, Utah, an earnest citizen who quotes John Locke while working frantically for what he believes to be the public good.  When I first called him for an interview, there was a long pause at the other end of the line.  And then, intense and exultant, relieved that a writer had finally appeared to tell his story, Mac said evenly: “I’ve been waiting for your call.”

Your reporting was intensive.  How did you decide to structure the book, writing both as a literary journalist and a memoirist?

The reporting was a joy.  I walked the Olympic downhill racecourse with the first trail crew to cut brush; with Bernhard Russi, the Swiss Olympic star who designed the course; with Earl Holding’s son-in-law; and with the Forest Service rangers who were the only voice of the people.  I skied the course with Gray Reynolds.  It was truly fascinating.
    I had many teetering towers to juggle—the years of notes from fieldwork and interviews, fat folders of relevant news stories, a library worth of relevant background reading, and my own “memoirish” musings, especially from our land and home-building adventures in Torrey.  Once I found the dramatic tension in my story—the mirror that reflected Earl and me back on one another in an interesting loop—my task in structuring and rewriting was to weave the strands together into a coherent, stimulating whole. 
    A book about the Olympics might have taken me three years to research and write, but Bargaining for Eden took ten.  You’ve got to be crazy to spend so much of your life on one project.  But it was a watershed for me.  I took on the book as a challenge to my skills as a writer, looking to integrate the interesting historical context, the characters, the journalistic tracking down of the details, and my own literary voice into something that really worked.  I thought this would happen by focusing on the Olympics, and when it didn’t, I just kept at it.  When I think about the book, it’s a culmination of my middle age, my coming-of-age, though maybe a little late!  It’s not a book from my youth or my maturity; it’s a pivotal book for me as a writer.

Part of what you’re after in Bargaining for Eden is finding a way for people to have conversations, even if they’re on different sides of these big issues.  You admit in the book that you are conflict-averse, that you are “no Michael Moore.”  Is that also a commentary about Moore’s style of confrontation wearing thin?

This is the fundamental realization that I reached in the book.  As I followed these stories over ten years, I became convinced that we’ve got to keep talking, no matter what.  We’ve got to keep listening, no matter what.  Visionary behavior turns out to be pretty simple. 
    It’s interesting that publication of my book coincides with the end of the Bush years and the beginning of the Obama years.  Clearly, the entire country is ready to move back toward civility in our public dialogue.

You describe your childhood travels with your family and how you often spent the night at the very place where Earl first made his mark, the famous Little America truck stop in Wyoming—a place you remember with affection.  You even admit to having a bit of Earl in you as you go on to describe how you and your wife became mini-developers of a sort.  Can you talk about the ethical and aesthetic implications of those first-person narratives?

If I expected to understand Earl’s dream for the mountain and penetrate to the roots of his values, I had to understand my own.  I’m a Boomer-generation environmentalist, shaped by my grief over barely missing the chance to see Glen Canyon before it was drowned by Lake Powell, galvanized by that first 1970 Earth Day when I was in college, and now a veteran of decades of letter-writing and public hearings.  Just as I poked around in Earl’s past, I looked to my childhood and my family to comprehend why Earl and I had such contrasting visions of caring for landscapes.
    Then, in the middle of tracking these stories in the northern Utah mountains, my wife and I fell in love with a mesa just outside Capitol Reef National Park, near the village of Torrey in southern Utah.  To make our own dream of ownership financially feasible, we split the land, selling an existing house and a few acres.  And so I became a land developer, too.  On a tiny scale, I became Earl—and had to face Earl’s values within myself.
    When we started the process of buying our land, I saw that I was surrounded by ironies: Earl was a developer and now I was a developer; Ogden as a community was helpless in the face of Snowbasin development (which I opposed) and the citizens of southern Utah were helpless in the face of the new Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument (which I supported).  The mirrors between the Mount Ogden citizens and the citizens in my new community, the growth and development in both places, my not wanting to be seen as a “NIMBY” (“Not in My Back Yard”) or a “wealthy, overeducated spoiled brat” (as a neighbor calls us move-ins in southern Utah)—all these parallels let me enter the story.  The book would have been straight nonfiction without this ethical paradox.  My grappling with my own issues brings the whole challenge of making these decisions about land to a personal level and makes me see Earl Holding in a very personal way.
    It wasn’t just a theoretical acknowledgment of the old line, “We have met the enemy, and he is us.”  It was much more startlingly personal: I had become the enemy.  Instead of a linear and depressing account of the little guys losing to power, the story became much more complex and nuanced as I turned from observer to actor and struggled to come to terms with my new identity as a second-home owner in The New West, a newly minted citizen of rural Utah.

And where are we headed in the rural West as it fills in with those second homes? Do you hope that your “Credo” at the book’s conclusion can help guide us back to Wallace Stegner’s “geography of hope,” which, elsewhere in the book you suggest has become a “geography of hostility”? 

I believe that community dialogue, reciprocity, and common ground exist; that we can break the angry standoff between longtime villagers and the “wealthy, overeducated, spoiled-brat” newcomers; that we must do so or the forces that threaten the open spaces we all cherish will steamroll our communities.  I found so much disheartening news that I wanted to find my way back from all that ferocious hostility. The raw young West is filling in and becoming what I call The Middle-Aged West. I believe we can see common values more clearly in our maturity.  The tension is there.  We have to talk about it.
    The “Credo” does end the book on a note of hope, with a condensed guide for citizens and communities seeking to reinvent their relationship with the American landscape.

 Did your experience working on
Testimony, the book of essays in defense of Utah wilderness that you compiled with Terry Tempest Williams, affect your decision to include the “Credo?”

My books lead me, layer by layer, through the complexities of my home landscape.  I started as a park ranger, writing straight natural history.  I moved on to native peoples.  After I had kids, I wanted to investigate the connections between childhood and wild places in The Geography of Childhood.  Testimony brought all of this to bear on direct political action.  And in Bargaining for Eden, I try to understand the consequences of that political action, to discover just how we make our decisions about these landscapes we call home.  The “Credo” sums up what I’ve learned while trying to connect the dots between conversation, conservation, and citizenship.

So, how are things now down in Torrey, where you built your home in Wayne County, Utah?  On the one hand, as a homeowner there, as a taxpayer, you have a certain standing that as an “outsider” you couldn’t have.  On the other, the mayor hung up on you.

I’ve been spending time in Wayne County for more than thirty years—ever since I was a park ranger at Capitol Reef in 1975—but I’ll always be an outsider.  I still believe that outsiders and locals in the rural West can make real progress if we stand along Main Street and talk and kick the tires and listen and kick the tires some more until we find our way to common ground.
    Meanwhile, the Bush administration did everything it could to rush development on public lands in America’s Redrock Wilderness—without public dialogue.  Many of those initiatives have the full momentum of the federal government, and it’s going to take years of courtroom battles to block them.
Across America we are waking up to the crisis of the loss of open space, from city sprawl to privatization of public lands in the remote West.  The land trust movement is thriving.  In Wayne County, in 2009 a new citizens association began to meet to address the future proactively.  I remain an optimist.  I have to be an optimist.

What’s next for you?

I spent the academic year of 2008-2009 as a Wallace Stegner Centennial Fellow at the University of Utah, leading a statewide conversation about Stegner’s work in the centennial year of his birth.  I greatly enjoyed teaching a class on “Stegner & Western Lands” at the University, and I’ll be teaching more college classes, I’m sure.
    Meanwhile, the photo exhibit on which my book, Lasting Light: 125 Years of Grand Canyon Photography, is based is now touring nationally under the auspices of the Smithsonian.  I’ve been speaking at each museum where the exhibit appears, sharing the stories of passion and persistence told to me by the contemporary Grand Canyon photographers featured in the project.

August 27, 2009 in California & The West, Ecology, Evolution and Environment, Politics | Permalink | Comments (1)

Technorati Tags: Bargaining for Eden, Stephen Trimble

Bargaining for Eden Reading Guide

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Stephen Trimble's Bargaining for Eden is now available in paperback. The following reading guide questions are available to facilitate the book group and classroom discussions the book is provoking: 

Discussion Questions:

1. Have you seen places in your own community change drastically, as open spaces fill in?  Were you part of the decision-making process that led to the change?

2. A fundamental chasm of values lies at the heart of Trimble's book – land as commodity vs. land as connection. Where do you fall on the continuum between these two extremes?

 3.  Trimble confronts his own complicity in filling in the open spaces of the West when he and his wife subdivide their land in southern Utah.  In building his home on the mesa, was he consistent with his beliefs? Once the author builds his southern Utah retreat, is he so different from Earl Holding?

4.  Given the fact that he did not interview Earl Holding, does the author have the right to give him so much weight as a character?  Does he treat Earl fairly?

 5.  Did we violate the public trust when we, as a nation, traded public land within a national forest to Earl Holding?  Were the citizens who live around Mount Ogden justified in believing that the Forest Service let them down?  What does the Snowbasin story say about the effectiveness of our democracy?

 6.  Wherever you live, public lands belong to you.  How vivid is your sense of ownership of the public lands nearest to your house?

 7.  Have you ever built on undeveloped land or purchased a home in a rural landscape? Is it possible to develop the land without harming it?


8.  Land trusts have become the most powerful force for preserving private lands.  Is there an active land trust in your community?  What lands have they preserved?  Have you visited any of these local conservation lands?

9.  At the end of the book, how did you feel about the future of conserving our open space in America?

More information on Stephen Trimble is available in this downloadable pdf of his extended biography, or on his website.

 Order the book today on www.ucpress.edu and save 20%.  Use code 09W6936 in the shopping cart at checkout.

July 22, 2009 in California & The West, Ecology, Evolution and Environment, From Our Authors, Politics | Permalink

Ocean Energy

Introduction to Energy in California Peter Asmus, President of Pathfinder Communications, is a journalist, consultant, and author of Reaping the Wind: how Mechanical Wizards and Profiteers Helped Shape Our Energy Future, among other books. He is also the author of Introduction to Energy in California, which was published by UC Press in June 2009. To learn more about the author and renewable energy, please visit his blog, Finding the Responsible Path.



Short-sighted Cuts to U.S. Ocean Energy Budgets

By Peter Asmus


The earth is the water planet, so it should come as no great surprise that forms of water power have been one of the world’s most popular “renewable” energy sources. Yet the largest water power source of all – the ocean that covers three-quarters of earth – has yet to be tapped in any major way for power generation. There are three primary reasons for this:

•    The first is the nature of the ocean itself, a powerful resource that cannot be privately owned like land that typically serves as the foundation for site control for terrestrial power plants of all kinds;

•    The second is funding. Hydropower was heavily subsidized during the Great Depression, but little public investment has since been steered toward marine renewables with the exception of ocean thermal technologies, which were perceived to be a failure.

•    The third reason why the ocean has not yet been industrialized on behalf of energy production is that the technologies, materials and construction techniques did not exist until now to harness this renewable energy resource in any meaningful and cost effective way.

As ocean energy advocates gather this week in Maine for a conference designed to raise the profile of this potential clean energy source, they face a daunting task in the light of recent proposed cuts in federal government support. With the best ocean current resource in the world in the Gulf Stream off the coast of Florida, excellent tidal sites in California, Maine, Washington and Alaska and prime wave resources off the coasts of California and Oregon, the U.S. is well positioned to be a global leader.

With good tidal power sites in the San Francisco Bay, and the nation’s most viable wave resource all along the North Coast, there is much at stake here for the Golden State.

Consider these simple facts: waves, tides and ocean currents are 800 times more powerful than the thin air that is wind. Tides can be predicted decades in advance, while the wind resource shifts so suddenly, forecasts are good for only a few hours at a time. The sun never shines at night.

Despite these inherent advantages, the total installed capacity of these hydrokinetic resources – a category that includes wave, tidal stream, ocean current, and ocean thermal– was less than 10 megwatts (MW) at the end of 2008 (enough power for about 10,000 homes). It is expected that within the next five to eight years, these emerging technologies will become commercialized to the point that they can begin competing for a share of the burgeoning market for carbon-free and non-polluting renewable resources. By 2015, almost 3,000 MW could be on-line around the world. That figure could jump to 200,000 MW by 2025.

A recent surge in interest in these new renewable options has generated a buzz, particularly in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Portugal, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand…and the U.S.

So far, President Obama wins high marks for shifting priorities on energy policy in the U.S. But his recent proposal to trim R&D funding for the emerging sector of “marine renewables” -- also often referred to as ocean power or hydrokinetic technologies – is extremely short-sighted and misses the boat. Trimming the $40 million proposed for marine renewables in 2009 by 25 percent will likely allow the U.K. and Europe to take a commanding lead in the development of a potential “game changing” clean power that is much more powerful and predictable than either solar or wind, both big winners in Obama’s proposed R&D budgets for the federal Dept. of Energy.

Europe, particularly the U.K., Ireland and Portugal, are the currently the best places to develop wave and tidal projects. Subsidy schemes there, as well as government funded test facilities, and streamlined permitting processes, will likely allow Europe to be the focal point of commercialization efforts in the near-term.

The U.S. has taken some promising steps recently resolving permitting issues for marine renewable technologies. But without more R&D, entrepreneurs already hit by the global economic meltdown may flounder and seek to do business on friendlier shores in Europe. While wave and tidal developers are offered lavish subsidies amounting to about 30 cents per kilowatt hour in Europe, the U.S. currently offers a measly 1 cent/kWh, half of the subsidy currently being offered to wind power projects, a fully commercialized technology.

The ocean is a huge global resource that will ultimately have to be tapped to meet the energy needs of the world’s growing populations – without contributing to global climate change. If the U.S. wants to be part of the solution, and help economic development in regions decimated by the collapse of native fishing stocks, then strategic investments need to be made today. We need wind, we need solar, but we should also be smart and be in a good position to tap the immense power of our oceans.

June 16, 2009 in California & The West, From Our Authors, Natural Sciences, Science, Web & Technology | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: California, Conservation, Energy, Energy in California, Environment, Environmental Studies, Natural History, Ocean, Peter Asmus, UC Press, University of California Press

Pop L.A. Wins 2009 Eldredge Prize

PoplaCécile Whiting's book Pop L.A.: Art and the City in the 1960s (2006) is the winner of the Smithsonian American Art Museum's 2009 Charles C. Eldredge Prize for Distinguished Scholarship in American Art. The annual prize honors an American art book, published in the past three years, that exhibits outstanding research and craft and expands the realm of traditional art scholarship. Pop L.A. succeeds with "impeccable yet adventurous research, which invites a reconceptualization of pop art and opens a discussion about a region and a period that needed further exploration," the Smithsonian said.

In the sixties, Los Angeles was in the depths of awkward adolescence; it was a nebula of suburbs searching for an orbital center, aware that it was different but unsure exactly how. Critics dismissed L.A.'s art scene as the superficial sister of the New York art world, a sun-drenched haven of popular culture where artists went to waste time. Cécile Whiting shows how artists like David Hockney, Ed Ruscha, Vija Celmins, Judy Chicago, Llyn Foulkes, Allan Kaprow, and Dennis Hopper defied these clichés and transformed the city from formless void into a distinct artistic and urban environment. Whiting examines "Pop" as a sense of place rather than an art style, and reveals how L.A. artists were connected not by the gallery but by their surroundings: the beach, the mountains, the highways, the dilapidated buildings and suburban sprawl, the sun glaring off a billboard, the scratch-the-surface world of Hollywood. By reimagining and representing the many faces of Los Angeles in their work, artists inked over the city's penciled outline and built its enduring urban identity.

The Eldredge Prize carries a $3,000 award, and the winner presents the annual Eldredge Prize Lecture. Whiting will deliver the 2009 lecture, titled "California War Babies: Picturing World War II in the 1960's," on December 3 at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C. Previous Eldredge Prize winners from UC Press include Rebecca Zurier's Picturing the City, Elizabeth Johns's Winslow Homer, David M. Lubin's Shooting Kennedy, Anthony W. Lee's Picturing Chinatown, and The Great American Thing, by Wanda Corn.

May 27, 2009 in American Studies, Art & Architecture, California & The West | Permalink

Technorati Tags: Charles C. Eldredge Prize, Cécile Whiting, Pop art

Saving Water, in the West and Beyond

WaterCalifornia's agricultural center is marked by hot, dry summer weather and mile after mile of lush green lettuce, strawberry, and artichoke crops, fig and almond orchards, grapevines, and much more. To stay fresh and green in the heat all year round, these plants have a high-maintenance beauty secret: the irrigation spouts that transform the dry ground into some of the most verstatile and productive farmland in the country.

These irrigation spouts are part of a vast network of aqueducts, dams, and pipes that carry water all over the state: from the Sierra Nevada Mountains to a faucet in Oakland, and from the Colorado River to a rosebush in Beverly Hills. As David Carle explains in Introduction to Water in California and Dorothy Green examines in detail in Managing Water, the state’s complex water transport system made it possible for cities and agriculture to develop in otherwise arid areas, and to grow far beyond the limit of the land’s natural water supply. Without importing water, says Carle, Southern California could only sustain around three million people, instead of the eighteen million who live there today. As a result, California’s households and its multi-billion-dollar agriculture industry depend largely on water pumped in from faraway lakes and rivers—sources that are now threatened by overdrainage, species depletion, pollution, and three years (and counting) of drought. Carle explores the challenges facing California in the new era of water management, and reveals how we can make thoughtful, responsible water choices as individuals.

Westwater Politics have spun a web of water laws as complex as California's water system itself. In Water and the West, Norris Hundley chronicles the Colorado River Compact, a bitterly won 1922 agreement that regulated the distribution of Colorado River water among seven western states, and whose legacy is critically relevant to water politics today. A safe, sustainable water supply is a worldwide challenge, and the forthcoming second edition of The Atlas of Water shows how water flows through human history and connects us across borders. A visual guide to the world's water supply, it maps out our global relationship with rain, rivers, and oceans.

As the demand for water grows and the supply dwindles, and as we see ecosystems destroyed and economies threatened, water is taking shape as a valuable necessity instead of a free-flowing resource, and we need to adapt our usage accordingly. Understanding how our water gets to our sinks and showers is the first step out of denial, and toward finding creative solutions for a viable water future. Now more than ever, there is immense opportunity for innovative people to shape this future, and prevent our most life-sustaining molecule from dripping away.

May 20, 2009 in California & The West, Ecology, Evolution and Environment | Permalink

Beaches and Parks in Southern California

Beaches and Parks in Southern California The California Coastal Commission was created by the voters of California, who adopted an initiative measure in 1972 that formed the Commission and gave it broad powers to plan and protect the coast. Later, the California Coastal Act of 1976 established the Commission as a permanent state agency with a mission to protect, maintain, and enhance the quality of the coastal environment. One of the Commission's principal goals is to maintain public access and public recreational opportunities along the coast, in a manner consistent with environmental preservation.

UC Press has published numerous books written by the California Coastal Commission, which include: California Coastal Access Guide, Sixth Edition (September 2003), Experience the California Coast: A Guide to Beaches and Parks in Northern California (November 2005), Beaches and Parks from Monterey to Ventura (April 2007), and most recently, Beaches and Parks in Southern California (May 2009).


By: Steve Scholl, Editor of the "Experience the California Coast" guidebook series

How do I get to the beach? In Southern California, it’s not always obvious. Goal #1, then, for Beaches and Parks in Southern California: provide a complete guide, with detailed topographic maps, to every beach, coastal access path, shoreline natural area, beach campground, aquarium, and nature center that we know about. If we missed a coastal access site that is open to the public, let us know at coast4U@coastal.ca.gov and we'll put it in the next edition.

What can I do, once I get there? Goal #2: describe where you can see a whale, launch a boat or a surfboard, find a wildflower in season, ride a bike along the sandy shore, or go for a run with your favorite four-footed friend. Also: list key site characteristics, including wheelchair accessibility, food and drink for sale, parking free or fee, and whether dog-friendly or not.

What is there to learn about the California coast? Goal #3: provide an introduction to the restless geology of the Southland and its earthquakes, oil deposits, and moving mountain ranges. Describe some key natural communities of plants and animals found even in populous coastal Orange County, or around the peaceful lagoons of San Diego County, or among the rugged peaks that lie west of downtown Los Angeles, or perhaps only on the Southern Channel Islands. For good measure, include a peek at some of Southern California's outsized personalities of the past:

    * George Freeth, the hero of Venice and Redondo, who a century ago invented the profession of lifeguard (as well as some lifesaving tools still in use);
    * Marion Davies, glamour puss and ultra-hostess, who entertained during Hollywood’s golden age at her private compound on Santa Monica Beach (now you can visit the place too);
    * Horticulturalist Kate Sessions, the “Mother of Balboa Park,” known (then) for her sensible shoes and salty vocabulary and (now) for her magnificent contribution to San Diego's palmy appearance; and
    * Henry Huntington, whose electric rail system brought the people of Los Angeles and Orange County to the beach before the auto age (oh yes, he also married America's wealthiest woman, who happened to be his uncle's widow).

Over 450 beaches, parks, and recreation sites in three counties; 352 pages; all-new color maps and color photos throughout. And if your destination lies farther north, see the Coastal Commission’s companion guides in the Experience the California Coast series or the California Coastal Access Guide.

May 19, 2009 in California & The West, Ecology, Evolution and Environment, From Our Authors | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: California, California Beaches, California Coast, California Coastal Commission, Environment, Leisure, Recreation, Travel, UC Press, University of California Press, West Coast

Rewilding the West: Restoration in a Prairie Landscape

Manning Richard Manning is an award-winning environmental author and journalist. He has written seven books, including Against the Grain: How Agriculture Has Hijacked Civilization, Grassland: The Biology, Politics, and Promise of the American Prairie, and Food's Frontier: The Next Green Revolution (UC Press, October 2001). Manning's latest book on the natural history of America's Great Plains is called Rewilding the West: Restoration in a Prairie Landscape and was published by UC Press in April 2009.

By: Richard Manning

I have a caution for my friends in the conservation movement pushing for quick action on environmental issues: 5,000 holes in the ground in Phillips County, Montana.   

The holes were the work of the last great progressive Administration, Franklin Roosevelt’s. It’s hard to imagine this today in the red state West, but the northern Great Plains was ground zero of the Dust Bowl, so the resulting poverty among young, well-educated people made the region a hot bed of progressive politics. In fact, Roosevelt carefully crafted his agriculture policy in the 1932 election to speak to the radicals simply because he feared revolution. It worked. He ran up his biggest electoral margins in the region, so when he took office, it was payback time.

The parallel between the New Deal and the current gantlet of predicaments facing the Obama Administration has been overworked, but in some ways, not worked hard enough. The New Dealers were in fact desperate for ideas for projects they could adopt immediately on taking office, an exact parallel to the phrase “shovel-ready projects” in the stimulus package.

It just so happens there was a guy, a well-meaning progressive guy, who had a series of ideas for putting people to work on the Great Plains, and he had a direct link to the White House. His ideas led to the creation of a number of utopian communities that quickly failed; a huge aggregation of federal land under the Bureau of Land Management, the agency that oversees the massive scale of overgrazing of the West; and to an arid landscape now full of holes. He started work in Phillips County, Montana. The feds reasoned the farmers there were going broke for lack of water, so paid farmers to dig ponds and dam streams to provide water for livestock. Never mind that this is a bit like helping a poor person by giving him a savings account, but nothing to put in it.

Today, the landscape is ravaged because every single stream was lost to the ponds, now numbering about one per square mile.

Environmental problems are complicated, and when times are hard, subject to the messianic zeal and outright charlatanism of those who believe they have The Solution. When adopted in a political panic, those solutions turn out to be the next set of problems.

May 15, 2009 in California & The West, From Our Authors | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: California and the West, Conservation, Great Plains, Land, Land Conservation, Natural History, Rewilding the West, Richard Manning, UC Press, University of California Press

Taste Fine Wines, Visit Old California, and Explore the History of Life on Earth

UC Press will unveil three brand-new series this fall. The new arrivals travel to Champagne, Tuscany, and colonial California, and to the forefront of systematic biology. The fall season also marks the debut of UC Publishing Services (UCPubS), a sustainable system combining print and digital publishing for scholarly books.

UC Press has about one hundred and thirty series in print. They introduce students to ancient philosophies, chronicle excavations of hominid remains in Ethiopia’s Middle Awash region, celebrate food and culture, reveal California's natural wonders, and explore many other subjects. The new series, The World’s Finest Wines, Western Histories, and Species and Systematics, each have two books due this fall.

Champagne Tuscany The experienced palate can trace a glass of Chianti back to the sprawling vineyards of Tuscany, and a celebratory sip of Champagne back to its namesake province in rural France. In THE WORLD’S FINEST WINES series, the experts behind World of Fine Wine magazine profile these and other classic regions, capturing each area's complex character. In The Finest Wines of Tuscany and Central Italy, Nicholas Belfrage visits more than ninety producers, selects his one hundred favorite wines, and reviews all the best vintages. In The Finest Wines of Champagne, Michael Edwards takes us on a terroir-based journey through the ultimate sparkling wine region. Exploring both traditions and trends, he tastes the most interesting wines, including two decades of vintages. 

SPECIES AND SYSTEMATICS is a scholarly series that investigates fundamental and practical aspects of systematics and taxonomy. Malte Ebach, co-author of Comparative Biogeography, is the series editor.  
    Earth and life share a complex history that stretches far beyond the origin of our species. Yet if we look closely enough at the mountains, oceans, and organisms of today, the entire history of life on earth can unfold before our eyes. To unlock these elusive secrets, biogeographers analyze patterns of biodiversity, species distribution, and geological history. In the landmark text Comparative Biogeography, Lynne Parenti and Malte Ebach outline a comparative approach to biogeography, rooted in phylogenetic systematics.
    Like organisms themselves, the idea and meaning of “species” has evolved over time. In Species, John Wilkins chronicles this concept's evolution from antiquity to the present. "Few topics have engaged biologists and philosophers more than the concept of species, and arguably no idea is more important for evolutionary science,” says Joel Cracraft of the American Museum of Natural History. Adds UC Berkeley’s Kevin Padian of the book: "This is not the potted history that one usually finds in texts and review articles." 

WESTERN HISTORIES is a new series published by the Huntington Library Press and the Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West, in partnership with the University of California Press. Drawing on the resources and programs of these institutions, the series enriches our understanding of California and the American West.    
    It is always fascinating to imagine what life was like for those who lived and died before our time. How did the people of the past see themselves and their worlds? In Alta California, Steven Hackel collects nine essays examining individual and collective identity in Spanish California. Innovative and extensively researched, the essays bring to light the perspectives of colonial California’s diverse population.
    In The Father of All, the Oakland Museum of California’s chief history curator Louise Pubols presents an illuminating study of the powerful de la Guerra family of Santa Barbara. Through their story, and analysis of the era’s political and economic upheaval, she reveals how patriarchy functioned through the generations in Spanish and Mexican California. 

UC Press and the California Digital Library are pleased to announce University of California Publishing Services (UCPubS). This integrated system combines print distribution, sales, and marketing services offered by UC Press with the open access digital publishing services provided by the California Digital Library through eScholarship. UCPubS is part of the University of California’s broader effort to ensure a sustainable scholarly publishing system in the service of research and teaching. Here's a preview of the UCPubS books coming this fall:

Nietzsche's Negative Ecologies, by Malcolm Bull, T.J. Clark, & Anthony Cascardi

Is Critique Secular? Blasphemy, Injury and Free Speech, by Talal Asad, Judith Butler, Saba Mahmood, & Wendy Brown

Stories from Schools: Case Studies of the California Academic Partnership Program, edited by Alice Kawazoe

Hard Work, Hard Times: Global Volatility and African Subjectives, by Anne-Maria Makhulu, Beth A. Buggenhagen, & Stephen Jackson

April 22, 2009 in California & The West, Digital Publishing, Ethnic Studies, Food & Wine, UC Press News | Permalink

Technorati Tags: Book Series, Food and Drink, Species and Systematics, UC Press, Unversity of California Press, Western Histories, Wine, Wine Industry, World's Finest Wines

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