Synopses & Reviews
Most writing about Las Vegas focuses on the spectacular story of casino gambling and tourism. This book is different. It recognizes that in addition to being the capital of glitz, Las Vegas is home to over one million permanent residents and is the fastest growing metropolitan region in the US - expecting to double in population over the next decade.
Using the perspective of the new urban sociology, this book is an historical account of how Las Vegas became a metropolitan area. Attention is paid to the role of the federal government in subsidizing growth, as it has done for the entire sunbelt, at the expense of the rest of the country; to the key actions of a select group of real estate developers who brought mass suburban housing to the desert; and to local public officials - some of whom worked to improve the region, and others who betrayed the people's trust for personal gain.
Las Vegas: The Social Production of an All-American City also addresses growing problems in the area, including an environmental crisis, increasing public debt, overcrowding of schools, gridlock traffic, the proliferation of special interests, and the poor performance of weak government.
Review
"
Sin City goes the way of Ozzie and Harriett? In this brilliant, well-documented probing of the nation's fastest growing metro area, the authors show how the abnormal city of gambling and vice has normalized. Now Las Vegans and their politicians face the urban challenges - from water and air pollution to traffic congestion and crime - that other urbanites encounter. As Las Vegas becomes more like America, America becomes more like Las Vegas."
Joe Feagin, University of Florida "Well documented and including numerous maps, charts, and figures, the book examines all aspects of urban development. Librarians should buy this book, it would fit into a public library nicely and is essential for universities." Library Journal
"Urbanists from all fields will benefit from learning about an unusually usual city. In short, Mark Gottdiener, Claudia Collins and David Dickens have boldly gone where no sociologists have gone before and, to use Las Vegas parlance, rolled seven. they have written a fascinating book on a fascinating subject." Michael S. Green, Community College of Southern Nevada
"The greatest virtue of this book is its in-depth look at the evolution of Las Vegas during the last twenty years. There is simply no better set of data about the recent history of the city. Gottdiener, Collins and Dickens excel at tracking politics and its implications, correctly noting the problems of managing not only growth but also social evolution with weak governmental institutions." Hal Rothman, University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
"Las Vegas is an intriguing mix of travel guide, political reporting, and urban commentary and thus presents a more topical, nuanced, and balanced profile of America's fastest growing metropolitan region than anything else currently available. The book fits nicely into undergraduates courses in urban sociology, geography, and politics." American Journal of Sociology
"... provides a complex and densely layered snapshot of a place all too often taken at face value." Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians
Synopsis
This book provides an historical account of the sunbelt city phenomenon. It reviews the boom and bust pattern of development, the tourism, the increasing importance of themed mega-resorts and fantasy vacations, gambling as a source of municipal revenue, demographic and social changes, a rapidly growing metropolitan environment, social problems, and family life in the shadow of a gambling mecca.
Las Vegas, Nevada is perhaps the most fascinating city, in the world to study for the practicing urbanist or sociologist. In the past 20 years, while most small- to medium-sized American cities went into decline, the population of Las Vegas doubled in size to over one million residents. It receives thirty million visitors annually and tourism brought $20.7 billion dollars to the city, in 1995.
This fascinating book provides an insightful look at the uniqueness of the Las Vegas experience and what can be learned from this city, in the desert.
Synopsis
Most writing about Las Vegas focuses on the spectacular story of casino gambling and tourism. This book is different.
Synopsis
Most writing about Las Vegas focuses on the spectacular story of casino gambling and tourism. This book is different.
- Written by two renowned urban studies scholars and a local Las Vegas journalist, combining scholarly research with investigative reporting
- First academic book to provide a synthesis on the recent growth of Las Vegas
- Appropriate for courses in urban studies, economic development and tourism, communities and cultural studies
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [274]-283) and index.
About the Author
Mark Gottdiener is Professor and Chair of the Sociology Department at State University of New York at Buffalo. An internationally regarded scholar, he writes on social theory, political economy, cultural studies, and semiotics. Among his best-known books are
The Theming of America (1997),
Postmodern Semiotics (Blackwell, 1994),
The New Urban Sociology (1994), and
The Social Production of Urban Space (second edition, 1994).
Claudia C. Collins is an Associate Professor at the University of Nevada Cooperative Extension. She worked as an award-winning television journalist in New York and Las Vegas and is presently doing research in the area of health and aging, and population studies.
David R. Dickens in Professor of Sociology at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. His primary areas of interest are continental social theory and contemporary mass culture.
Table of Contents
List of Tables.
List of Maps.
List of Figures.
Acknowledgments.
Preface.
1. From Desert Oasis to Glitter Capital of the World.
2. Corporations and the Advent of Megaresorts.
3. Media Vegas: Hype, Boosterism, and the Image of the City.
4. The Advent of Metropolitanization: Rapid Population Growth and a Booming Economy.
5. The Normalization Process I: The Construction of Community Life by the Private Sector.
6. The Normalization Process II: The Production of Civic Culture by the Public Sector.
7. Living in Las Vegas.
8. Local Politics and Community Interests.
9. Las Vegas: An All-American Metropolis.
References.
Index.