In the aftermath of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, residents of the
city's iconic Mission District bucked the city-wide development plan,
defiantly announcing that in their neighborhood, they would be calling
the shots. Ever since, the Mission has become known as a city within a
city, and a place where residents have, over the last century, organized
and reorganized themselves to make the neighborhood in their own image.
In Making the Mission, Ocean Howell tells the story of how residents
of the Mission District organized to claim the right to plan their own
neighborhood and how they mobilized a politics of place and ethnicity to
create a strong, often racialized identity--a pattern that would repeat
itself again and again throughout the twentieth century. Surveying the
perspectives of formal and informal groups, city officials and district
residents, local and federal agencies, Howell articulates how these
actors worked with and against one another to establish the very ideas
of the public and the public interest, as well as to negotiate and
renegotiate what the neighborhood wanted. In the process, he shows that
national narratives about how cities grow and change are fundamentally
insufficient; everything is always shaped by local actors and concerns.