Whitewashed Adobe Chapter Summary

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The tone of Whitewashed Adobe delivers an ethnic and cultural history of Los Angeles. The author, William Deverell, indicates “Los Angeles has been the city of the future for a long time.” The book takes a revealing and harsh look at prejudice, political power and control in the early vision of 19th century Los Angeles and its surrounding communities. Deverell’s main interest is the economically, culturally and politically powerful Anglos and their view of ethnicity and race that enabled them to distance themselves from the Mexican people. Whitewashed Adobe’s six chapters illuminate how these men “appropriated, absorbed, and occasionally obliterated” Mexican sites and history in going forth with their vision for Los Angeles. Starting with the first chapter, Deverell examines the racial and ethnic violence that took place in the wake of American defeat. In no more than thirty years or so, ethnic relations had appeased and the Mexican people were outnumbered quickly (as well as economically marginalized and politically disenfranchised), as the second chapter discloses. The author examines a variety of topics to further his case but the most compelling and captivating sections of the book come into the third, fourth and fifth chapters. The third chapter focuses its attention …show more content…

Deverell presents a clear analysis of race and labor segmentation of Mexican men to work in the brick making industry, which paid poorly. The workers and their families were confined to ethnic borders around the company town. Many of the worker’s homes were in poor conditions, none included gas, plumbing or electricity; not until the 1930s did electricity arrive. Rent for the houses was three to four dollars a month. Adobe (brick consisting of straw and mud), an antiquity to the Mexican people, was replaced by brick. According to the Anglos, brick was a symbol for their

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