1st Edition

Neon Metropolis How Las Vegas Started the Twenty-First Century

By Hal Rothman Copyright 2002
    376 Pages 10 Color & 10 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    376 Pages 10 Color & 10 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    376 Pages 10 Color & 10 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Praise for the Previous Edition (0 415 92612 2): ...lively and provocative...this book will teach you something startling on nearly every page... --The New York Times Book Review Like the Emerald City, Las Vegas glitters brightly in the vast Nevada desert, a haven for refugees from ordinary America. A hip, iconic, playground that exports nothing, it nonetheless earns billions from consumer services alone -- gambling, hotels, gaming, and entertainment. It is, historian Hal Rothman argues, the quintessential city of the future. As other cities try to mirror its success and huge, respectable corporations like Coca-Cola invest in a piece of the pie, the very traits that have ostracized Las Vegas in the past -- hedonism, money worship, and permissiveness -- have today made it America's fastest growing urban center. From the gambling-driven, mob-run Sin City of the 1940s to the corporatization of the Strip as a respectable family entertainment center after the 1970s, Las Vegas has shown incredible economic resilience and adaptability. The first full account of America's new dream capital, Neon Metropolis brilliantly shows how Las Vegas gambled on the post-industrial service economy well before the rest of the country knew it was coming, and won.

    Introduction Part I: Making Money 1. Inventing Modern Las Vegas 2. It's Hard to Be Elvis in Las Vegas: Entertainment in the Malleable Metropolis 3. The Last Detroit: The New Service Economy 4. Freedom and Limits in a City of Pleasure Part II: Filling Las Vegas 5. The New Emigrant Trail 6. The Face of the Future 7. Aztlan in Neon: Latinos in the New City Part III: Building a New City 8. The Tortoise and the Air: Life in a Libertarian Desert 9. Rolling to a Stop: The Weight of Traffic 10. The Instant Metropolis: Building a City without Basements or Closets 11. Community from Nothingness: Neighborhoods of Affinity Epilogue

    Biography

    Hal Rothman is a professor of history at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and the editor of the journal Environmental History. The author of Devil's Bargains: Tourism in the Twentieth Century American West, Rothman is a frequent commentator on Las Vegas. He has been featured on National Public Radio, CBS Sunday Morning, and in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and in the four-hour A&E Television Network documentary, Las Vegas.

    "[Rothman] treasures the moment when Jerry Tarkanian (a towel-chewing stoic) took his Runnin' Rebels to the N.C.A.A. basketball finals, and defeated Duke, despite the 'snotty' sign borne by some Duke supporters: 'Welcome, fellow student-athletes.' This informative and useful book comes loaded...there is a wealth of practical detail...This book will teach you something startling on nearly every page." -- New York Times Book Review
    "A brilliant interpretation of the supernova of American Cities." -- Mike Davis, author of City of Quartz
    "In this thoughtful study, Rothman provides a detailed history of a uniquely American city. The subject of urban planning and design is enriched by Rothman's focus on the social history of the city, including its architecture, economics, government, labor issues, transportation, environmental policy, and immigration situation...His empathetic exploration of working class Latino lives is especially rewarding." -- Library Journal
    "Rothman masterfully melds painstaking research, relevant anecdotes and well-chosen interviews to illuminate large social, economic and cultural themes and show where they fit into Las Vegas. Unlike others who have tried to capture the city, Rothman doesn't traffic in conspiracy theories or florid prose to make Las Vegas seem larger or darker than life. Instead, he has produced a sprightly written book that took him out of the ivory tower and onto the streets to produce a compelling and accurate picture of the neon metropolis." -- Jon Ralston
    "Most of the information we receive about modern places is as ignorant as it is superficial, and yet from the very capital of superficiality and glitz, Las Vegas, Hal Rothman has paradoxically delivered a book that is engaged, funny, smart and historically informed. Las Vegas, Rothman tells us, represents socially sanctioned deviance. The deviance in Neon Metropolis we expect to find, but Rothman delivers much more. This is a book about changing American culture and the surprising ways that Las Vegas, which is different from the rest of America, reveals so much about the United States in a new century." -- Richard White, Stanford University
    "Neon Metropolis is Hal Rothman's intellectual valentine to the city he loves. A stunning contribution to labor studies and western history, this book provides a bold and compelling portrait of America's City of Lights, a place where dreams are made and dreams are shattered all under a corporate sky. For anyone who wants to get beneath the glitz of Las Vegas, Neon Metropolis is a must read." -- Vicki Ruiz
    "Hal Rothman, who has brilliantly and prolifically parsed so much of the American West past and present, has done it again with our most remarkable city. His deft, ever insightful portrait of Las Vegas and its tumultuous and bizarre rise is a marriage of scholarship and journalism made not in some Strip wedding chapel but in the solid tradition of urban history." -- Sally Denton, author of The Money and the Power: The Making of Las Vegas and its Hold on America 1947-2000
    "Hal Rothman's wonderful book forcefully revises virtually every standard-issue urbanist cliche about Vegas. Within the city of sin and simulation, he finds one of striving, decency, and possibility, a post-millennial American dream." -- Michael Sorkin