24.4.07

touring the bush (21) : l.a.tinópolis, parte one (zoots)


topping black, white and asian, the latino population count for l.a. (a.k.a losángeles) exceeds 9 million (considering the whole metropolitan area), and the city is one of the few big u.s. of a. cities with a latino majority. l.a. is at the forefront of what mike davis calls the “latinization” of large central cities across the country, from chicago to dallas to new york, while samuel huntington poops his pants. losángeles is the second largest of all mexican, salvadorean and guatemalan cities all in one, and has one of the world’s largest spanish-speaking urban populations.

even so, as davis himself affirms, at least until very recently, a certain “invisibility” of latinos persisted in certain urban scenes and sectors. that doesn’t mean latinos don’t know how to show-off. maybe it’s the baroque in us sureños, but as a way of countering this social, political and economic invisibility or marginality, latinos have proven to be masters at these games of conscious excessful display, usually concentrated in cultural practice and symbols, from food to style to speak to place gestures. latinos are big on markers.


in the urban history of l.a., there are particularly “colorful” (sometimes blood-red colorful), intense city-marking moments. after decades of white-washing (anglo mass migration and domination came full-throttle in the 1850s, and hispanic l.a. dropped from suddenly second term to practical cultural erasure), it wasn’t until the 1940s that l.a. felt the serious first shakes of the new latino inflow.


even before watts 1.0, latinos were stirring trouble in the zoot suit riots that sparked in l.a. in the summer of 1943. the zoots set the tone of urban (conflict) activism and confrontation that would follow in chavez ravine, the chicano movements of the 60s and other l.a.tino political urban squabbles. but zoots were beyond mexican or chicano, even beyond latino. zoot subculture was an (ethnically charged) offshoot of early bigband jazz/pop and jitterbugging (like the zazous in prewar france, or the swing kids in weimar germany), and shared the elements of these earliest blurry pop/youth style movements (before rock n'roll and before flower power) that ended up being -sometimes unintendedly- highly political. even though zoots were usually associated with pachucos, mexican-american proto-punksters, the gang element was not inherent to them. zoot-suits started in dancehalls and ended on the streets.

in his essay "the zoot-suit and style warfare,” stuart cosgrove notes that “the zoot-suit is more than an exaggerated costume, more than a sartorial statement, it is the bearer of a complex and contradictory history… these youths were not simply grotesque dandies parading the city's secret underworld, they were (quoting ellison’s the invisible man) the stewards of something uncomfortable , a spectacular reminder that the social order had failed to contain their energy and difference.…”


these issues of extreme styling, marking difference and tease tactics still permeate contemporary cultural and political latino production in l.a., on different terms and scales, from gangs to graffiti to front lawns to demonstrations; going beyond simple fashioning to a deeper, more enduring set of spatial practices, including mainstream urban politics and real estate, the ultimate city-markers.

next : l.a.tinópolis, parte two (power shift)

3 comments:

Lauren said...

Hi there,

I want to use an image you had up a while of Kubitschek looking majestic and technicolor in one of the sectors of brasilia... i have been reading your blog for a while but just stumbled on this photo via google image and its going to work quite well for a little paper i'm writing here in grad school.

wondering if you have the citation. although if you don't have it, i guess i'll footnote you.

thanks so much. keep up the good work.

kimberly sayer said...

The Latinization may refer to: The writing in the Roman alphabet (Romanization) of words from different languages with no writing system or one; adoption of practices of Western Christianity for the Eastern Churches: Latinization liturgical Referring to antiquity, the term Romanization expansion of culture and language of Rome (eg, the Roman Hispania) The adoption or imposition of a style or phonetic Latin place names in other countries or even cities or modern regions already known in the Roman Empire; In literature, the romanization is the practice of writing a name in a Latin style, emulating Latin authors to present eg. a more disclosing.costa rica fishingIt is transforming a non-Latin name in Latin sounds (eg Geber to Jabir), translating a name with a specific meaning into Latin (eg Venator for Cacciatore), or choosing a new name with some attributes of the person (eg Noviomagus for Daniel Santbech, possibly from the Latin name of the city of Nijmegen). In biology, species are given in Latin or Greek for the binomial nomenclature, but simre Latin alphabet and Latin form.
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Anonymous said...

The Latinization of West Africa, a collection of music from '60s and '70s West Africa that is heavily influenced by Latin sounds from the era,Costa rica toursrepresenting a mutual cultural exchange that would have a permanent impact on the evolution of each region's trademark sound. Much of what makes modern Latin music so irresistible came from Africa in the first place.
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