TY - BOOK AU - Devienne,Elsa TI - Sand rush: the revival of the beach in twentieth-century Los Angeles SN - 9780197539750 PY - 2024/// CY - New York, NY PB - Oxford University Press KW - Bathing beaches KW - Government policy KW - California KW - Los Angeles KW - History KW - 20th century KW - Environmental aspects KW - Urban renewal KW - City planning KW - Los Angeles (Calif.) KW - Social life and customs N1 - Translation and revision of: La ruée vers le sable : une histoire environnementale des plages de Los Angeles (Sorbonne Editions, 2020); Includes bibliographical references and index; Foreword / Jenny Price -- Introduction : "the greatest city-on-the-shore in the world" -- Westside LA -- A troubled seaside order -- The emergence of the Los Angeles beach lobby -- A beach for the suburban age -- Beach bodies -- Who has the right to the modern beach? -- Ebbing tides -- Epilogue : the view from the Santa Monica Pier N2 - "The Los Angeles shoreline is one of the most iconic natural landscapes in the world. Yet, how natural is it? And how did it come to embody the quintessential modern beach experience? In the early 20th-century, Angelenos routinely lamented the city's crowded, polluted, and eroded shores and many beaches were private and thus inaccessible to the public. Sand Rush recounts the extraordinary beach modernization campaign that transformed Los Angeles into one of the world's greatest coastal metropolises, revealing how the city's man-made shores served as a central locus for the reinvention of seaside leisure and the triumph of modern bodies. Between the 1920s and the 1960s, LA engineers, city officials, urban planners, and the business elite worked together to transform the relatively untouched beaches of the early twentieth century into modern playgrounds for the white middle class. They cleaned up and artificially enlarged the beaches and destroyed old piers and barracks to make room for new accommodations. Members of this powerful "beach lobby" adapted the beach experience to the suburban age, effectively preventing a much-feared "white flight" from the coast. In doing so, they established Southern California as the national reference point for beach planning and opened up vast public spaces for Angelenos to express themselves, show off their bodies, and forge lively subcultures. Their efforts paid off"-- ER -