1st Edition

Redemptive Dreams Engaging Kevin Starr's California

Edited By Jason S. Sexton Copyright 2024
    180 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    180 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    An essential piece in California Studies, Redemptive Dreams: Engaging Kevin Starr’s California offers the first critical engagement with the vision of California’s most ambitious interpreter. While Starr’s multifaceted and polymathic vision of California offered a unique gaze—synthesizing central features, big themes, and incredible problems with the propitious golden dream—his eight-volume California Dream series, along with several other books and thousands of published articles and essays, often puzzled historians and other scholars. Historians in the contemporary school of critical historiography often found Starr’s narrative approach—seeking to tell the internal drama of the California story—to be less attuned to the most important work happening in the field. Such a perspective fails to acknowledge key developments in historical subfields like Black and African American Studies, Chicana/o/x Studies, Asian Studies, Native Studies, and others that draw from the narrative in their critical work and how this relates to Starr’s contribution. But it also neglects Starr as a theological interpreter. Along with being a major figure in California institutional life, with literary output spanning genres from journalism to critical cultural and political commentary, to history and memoir, Starr’s unique contribution to California Studies as a distinctly Catholic historian has yet to be adequately understood. Through his lived experience as a devout Catholic to the particular theological features of this faith tradition that animated his views, this critical sociological perspective sheds new light on his project. With contributions from sociology, history, and theology, akin to investigations appearing in Theology and California: Theological Refractions on California’s Culture (Routledge), Redemptive Dreams offers interdisciplinary perspectives that highlight key features inherent in interdisciplinary theological reflection on place and illuminates these diverse disciplinary discourses as they appear in Starr’s articulation of the California Dream. Such a vision remains important for reckoning with California’s place in the world.

    TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction Anthea M. Hartig, The Smithsonian Museum of American History 1. Interpreting California: An Ever-Challenging Task Kevin Starr 2. Redeeming the Dream: Revisiting Kevin Starr’s California in Theological Perspective Jason S. Sexton, UCLA 3. The Dream Interrupted: Kevin Starr at The San Francisco Examiner, 1976-83 Peter Richardson, San Francisco State University 4. Race, Spirituality, and the Expansive Pluralism of the California Dream-Turning-to-Reality Robert Chao Romero, UCLA; Russell Jeung, San Francisco State University, #StopAAPIHate; Amos Yong, Fuller Theological Seminary 5. Sin, Hope, and Pilgrimage in Kevin Starr’s Style of American Studies Rick Kennedy, Point Loma Nazarene University; Peter Choi, Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley 6. Kevin Starr’s California Dream and the Creation, Destruction, and Redemption of California Landscapes Megan Kendrick, Woodbury University 7. ‘This Could Be Heaven or This Could Be Hell’: Kevin Starr’s California, Memory, and the Theological Imagination Cid Gregory Martinez and Thomas Ehrlich Reifer, University of San Diego 8. On the Past and Future of Kevin Starr’s California Mike Davis Select Bibliography Gary Kurutz, California State Library Foundation

    Biography

    Jason S. Sexton (Ph.D., St Andrews) is a theologian, social theorist, and cultural historian. He is currently Lecturer in UCLA’s Sociology Department and Visiting Research Scholar at UCLA’s Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, Los Angeles, USA. Before that, he served as interim California State University Associate Dean of Academic Programs and as editor of Boom California, taught at Cal State Fullerton, and was also a postdoctoral fellow at Ridley Hall, Cambridge. He has held visiting fellowships at UC Berkeley’s Center for the Study of Religion, UC Berkeley’s Center for Law and Society, UC Riverside’s Center for Ideas and Society, and USC’s Center for Religion and Civic Culture. He is the author or editor of eight books, among which is Theology and California: Theological Refractions on California’s Culture (Routledge).