ABSTRACT

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.

part I|119 pages

Making Money

chapter 1|29 pages

Inventing Modern Las Vegas

chapter 2|30 pages

It's Hard to Be Elvis in Las Vegas

Entertainment in the Malleable Metropolis

chapter 3|26 pages

The Last Detroit

The New Service Economy

chapter 4|31 pages

Freedom and Limits in a City of Pleasure

part II|83 pages

Filling Las Vegas

chapter 5|25 pages

The New Emigrant Trial

chapter 6|25 pages

The Face of the Future

chapter 7|29 pages

Aztlán in Neon

Latinos in the New City

part III|112 pages

Building a New City

chapter 8|27 pages

The Tortoise and the Air

Life in a Libertarian Desert

chapter 9|25 pages

Rolling to a Stop

The Weight of Traffic

chapter 10|29 pages

The Instant Metropolis

Building a City without Basements or Closets

chapter 11|26 pages

Community from Nothingness

Neighborhoods of Affinity