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Waikiki Dreams: How California Appropriated Hawaiian Beach Culture
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Barnes and Noble
Waikiki Dreams: How California Appropriated Hawaiian Beach Culture
Current price: $125.00
Barnes and Noble
Waikiki Dreams: How California Appropriated Hawaiian Beach Culture
Current price: $125.00
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
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Patrick Moser uses surfing to open a door on the cultural appropriation practiced by Depression-era Californians against a backdrop of settler colonialism and white nationalism. Recreating the imagined leisure and romance of life in Waikīkī attracted people buffeted by economic crisis and dislocation. California-manufactured objects like surfboards became a physical manifestation of a dream that, for all its charms, emerged from a white impulse to both remove and replace Indigenous peoples. Moser traces the rise of beach culture through the lives of trendsetters Tom Blake, John “Doc” Ball, Preston “Pete” Peterson, Mary Ann Hawkins, and Lorrin “Whitey” Harrison while also delving into California’s control over images of Native Hawaiians via movies, tourism, and the surfboard industry.
Compelling and innovative,
opens up the origins of a defining California subculture.