An absorbing jouney into the Latino struggle to gain social power, by the acclaimed urban historian

Is the capital of Latin America a small island at the mouth of the Hudson River? Will California soon hold the balance of power in Mexican national politics? Will Latinos reinvigorate the US labor movement?

These are some of the provocative questions that Mike Davis explores in this fascinating account of the Latinization of the US urban landscape. As he forefully shows, this is a demographic and cultural revolution with extraordinary implications. With Spanish surnames increasing five times faster than the general population, salsa is becoming the predominant ethnic rhythm (and flavor) of contemporary city life. In Los Angeles, Houston, San Antonio, and (shortly) Dallas, Latinos outnumber non-Hispanic whites; in New York, San Diego and Phoenix they outnumber Blacks. According to the Bureau of the Census, Latinos will supply fully two-thirds of the nation's population growth between now and the middle of the 21st century when nearly 100 millions Americans will boast Latin American ancestry.

Davis focuses on the great drama of how Latinos are attempting to translate their urban demographic ascendancy into effective social power. Pundits are now unanimous that Spanish-surname voters are the sleeping giant of US politics. Yet electoral mobilization alone is unlikely to redress the increasing income and opportunity gaps between urban Latinos and suburban non-Hispanic whites. Thus in Los Angeles and elsewhere, the militant struggles of Latino workers and students are reinventing the American left. Fully updated throughout, and with new chapters on the urban Southwest and the explodiing counter-migration of Anglos to Mexico, Magical Urbanism is essential reading for anyone who wants to grasp the future of urban America.

“A rare combination of an author, Rachel Carson and Upton Sinclair all in one.” — Susan Faludi

“Magical Urbanism is a lively, trenchant inquiry into a demographic phenomenon on grat importance.” — Times Literary Supplement

“In this short book ... Davis brings his characteristic analytical energy, eye for detail and exhaustive research to bear on an important phenomenon that remains mostly unexplored.” — In These Times

This well-researched, well-written book is driven by powerful feelings of indignation at the hardships Latinos are suffering in the United States today.” — Washington Post

MacArthur Fellow Mike Davis is a professor at the University of California, Irvine, and an editor of New Left Review. His pioneering book on Los Angeles, City of Quartz, has sold over 200,00 copies, and his work as a historian and urbanist has been hugely influential across the academic disciplines and beyond. He lives in San Diego. His other books include Prisoners of the American Dream, Planet of Slums, Dead Cities, Ecology of Fear, Monster at the Door, Late Victorian Holocausts, and Buda’s Wagon: A Brief History of the Car Bomb.

Publication
Cloth: April 2000
Paper: August 2001
New Edn.: July 2008


208 pages

Orig. Paper
ISBN-13: 978 1 85984 328 4
US$13 / £10 / CAN$19

Cloth
ISBN-13: 978 1 84467 264 6
US$95 / £55 / CAN$119

Paper
ISBN-13: 978 1 84467 247 6
US$14.95 / £10.99 / CAN$18.50