155 lines
8.4 KiB
Markdown
155 lines
8.4 KiB
Markdown
California State University Monterey Bay
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SBS 385 *Environmental History of California*
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California: A History (Starr 2005) Chapter Notes on the themes of
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Science and Technology, Art and Lifestyle
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**Chapter 10 O Brave New World!: Seeking Utopia Through Science and
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Technology**
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The development of mining technology led to the Pelton turbine, a
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California invention, which in turn brought **hydroelectricity**, which
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in turn made possible an industrial infrastructure. In California,
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**aviation** was adopted and perfected, by the 1920s scientists took the
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lead in **vacuum tube technology**, making possible **radio** and
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**television**, and the 1930s were smashing the **atom**, the 1950s
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through the **semiconductor**, the digital revolution, then came
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**biotechnology**.
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In each instance, the specific **scientific, engineering, or
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technological advance** emerging from California was linked to the
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effort to **discover a truth**, **solve a problem**, **make a profit**,
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make **productive use of one’s time**, and, in the process, make the
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world **a better and more interesting place**. Open, flexible,
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entrepreneurial, unembarrassed by the profit motive, California emerged
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as a society friendly to the **search for utopia through science and
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technology**. The **California Academy of Sciences** goal would be the
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“systematic survey of every portion of the state and the collection of a
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cabinet of rare and rich productions”.
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A group of Californians led by Frederick Law Olmsted, the noted traveler
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and landscape architect, lobbied through Congress a bill setting aside
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under the protection of the state a huge tract of Sierra land that
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included the Yosemite Valley and the Mariposa Big Trees. Camping trips
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became a rite of passage and celebration for Californians eager to
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define to themselves just exactly what California was all about.
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John Muir encountered Yosemite and the mountains of California that gave
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rise to a lifetime vocation. He served as the first president of the
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Sierra Club, founded in 1892, and in 1903 camped out in Yosemite with
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President Theodore Roosevelt. He ceaselessly advocated the creation of a
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national park system.
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**Geology, mining, astronomy, aviation**: here were some basic
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stimulants to scientific creativity in California. New inventions in
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Palo Alto would soon be making an entirely new world of
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**transcontinental phone calls, radio, television, and high-speed
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electronics** possible. In the first three decades of the 20^th^
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century, Stanford University developed a special expertise in
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**electrical engineering**. Across the Bay in Berkeley, meanwhile, a
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contribution was being made to the most important scientific and
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technological feat of the 20^th^ century: releasing the power of the
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atom, making Berkeley a center for **nuclear research**. Palo Alto had
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become the epicenter of **high-tech venture capitalism**, serving
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Silicon Valley start-ups.
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Silicon Valley, as the region triangulated by Palo Alto, Sunnyvale, and
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San Jose soon came to be called, was a place, a culture, a center of
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invention and manufacture that revolutionized society itself by taking
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to new levels the way people communicated, stored and retrieved
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information, analyzed problems, and increasingly, thought. It was as if
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a new neural network had been created for the human race: a digital and
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silicon-based circuitry that extended the capacity of the individual
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human being by linking him or her to a vast ocean of data and to
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software applications capable of driving a myriad of programs for
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navigating that ocean. The introduction to the public in 1983 of the
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**Internet** – in the invention of which California-based scientists
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played key roles – compounded this collective nooshphere (to use the
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terminology of the Jesuit mystic Teilhard de Chardin), this shared and
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integrated community of information. No wonder Silicon Valley companies
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were so different in their organizational structure, so nonhierarchical,
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so quick to cluster talent for specific purposes, then reassemble it for
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another task! **Their very product represented an** **evolutionary step
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forward for the human race**.
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Yet so fervent had become this faith in science that 59% of the
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Californians voting in the November 2004 election passed Proposition 71
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authorizing the sale of \$3 billion in bonds over a ten-year period to
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finance state-monitored programs of stem cell research. Bypassing the
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National Institutes of Health, which had been sponsoring biological
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research at the federal level for 117 years, Proposition 71 asserted
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California as a nation-state enamored – beyond considerations of
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theology and/or fiscal prudence in the midst of a continuing budget
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crisis – of seeking utopia through science and technology, which had
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become a way of life.
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**Chapter 11 An Imagine Place: Art and Life on the Coast of Dreams**
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The 20^th^ century witnessed the debut of **three entertainment media**
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– film, radio, and television – dependent upon electronic technologies
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developed in California. California continued to energize the arts as
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matrix, occasion, and subject, the **arts defined and redefined
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California as an imagined place**.
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Robinson **Jeffers** (poet who lived in Carmel-by-the-Sea) took the
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fundamental aesthetic premise of California since the mid-nineteenth
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century, **nature**, and make of it **a lifestyle, a philosophy, and a
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poetic practice**.
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John **Steinbeck** (raised in Salinas and studied biology at Stanford)
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saw human life more elemental terms: biologically, that is, as living
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organisms in a landscape, and collectively as “group-man” held together
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by biological linkages.
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William **Saroyan** (writer of Fresno and San Francisco) sought to fill
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the void – in his case, the suspected emptiness of the universe itself –
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with his version of that perennial concern of California writers,
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bohemianism, which is to say, the shoring up of threatened identities
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through art and “hanging out.”
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Aldous **Huxley’s** *After Many a Summer Dies the Swan* (1939) – which
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some consider the best Los Angeles novel ever – satirizes California’s
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fake promise of youth through the figure of an aging tycoon based on
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William Randolph Hearst. It ends apocalyptically.
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This sense of California’s promise betrayed and doom impending provides
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a leitmotif of writing in the postwar period, most notably by
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Sacramento-born Joan Didion. She more than implied that both her
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personal California, in terms of the myths she had absorbed as a child,
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and the larger California experiment contained what she believed to be a
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crippling level of deceit and self-deception.
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The **Beats** of the 1950s agreed, with San Francisco becoming the
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epicenter of the movement for City Lights bookstore founder and poet
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Lawrence Ferlinghetti and writer Jack Kerouac (*On The Road*, *Dharma
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Bums*, *Big Sur*). Allan Ginsberg’s poem *Howl*, the poetic manifesto of
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the Beat movement, evoked the anguish of a postwar generation oppressed
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by the soulless materialism of corporate America and took refuge in sex,
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rebellion, and drugs, often to their own destruction. Theirs was a
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style, a posture, an attitude – as much political as literary – toward
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postwar America, which they believed had become corporate, right-wing,
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cold, and conformist.
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Gary **Snyder** (poet and UC Davis professor of English) ultimately
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eschewed politics in favor of a **nature-oriented mysticism** that had
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been a persistent theme of imaginative writing in California since the
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frontier. Snyder had from the beginning the ambience of a seeker. He
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spent twelve years studying Zen Buddhism in Japan and also visited India
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in search of enlightenment. As artist, Gary Snyder was the greatest of
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the Beats, a notable American poet of any school, and, in his nature
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orientation and environmentalism, the example *par excellence* of the
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California tradition he represented and fulfilled.
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The **Outdoor Life** characterized the California lifestyle since the
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19^th^ century. If California has made any contribution to sport on a
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national level, it is in the democratization of pursuits that were
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previously the prerogatives of elites, **thanks to recreational policies
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of Progressivism**.
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Surfing would become an affordable, widespread pursuit, an icon of the
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California lifestyle, celebrated in song, film, advertising, and other
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media, where everyone is forever young and looked great. Mountaineering,
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skiing, rock climbing, windsurfing, hang gliding – at the interface of
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nature and science further reinforced the “DNA code” of California.
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