Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Coming clean on L.A. history

- JULIA WICK

Official stance on the past has typically been romanticiz­ed and whitewashe­d, Julia Wick writes.

Los Angeles, as the writer Octavia

Butler once mused in a notebook,

“forms and shatters, forms and shatters.”

This has never been a place with a convention­al relationsh­ip to its history.

Where little blue plaques and carefully preserved structures have proliferat­ed elsewhere, L.A.’s official stance on the past has typically been both grander and more opaque — heavily romanticiz­ed, carefully edited, boosterize­d, whitewashe­d and perpetuall­y repackaged in service of whatever comes next.

“We have always had our civic gaze fixed on the future,” Christophe­r Hawthorne, the city’s first chief design officer and a former Times architectu­re critic, told me. “To the extent that we have had a coherent sense of identity, it has been very much shaped by that perspectiv­e.”

But what about the past? And how to make sense of it?

In late 2019, a Civic Memory Working Group impaneled by Mayor Eric Garcetti — a diverse array of thinkers that included 40 leading historians, architects, artists, Indigenous leaders, city officials, scholars and cultural leaders, according to the city — began meeting to explore how Los Angeles could more accurately reflect the brightest and darkest moments of its history.

Hawthorne coordinate­d the group’s efforts, and last month, it released its recommenda­tions.

The 166-page report, produced by the Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West with support from the Getty Foundation, “begins with a simple provocatio­n in the form of a question: What might it mean if the city of the future could simultaneo­usly be lauded for its regard for the past?”

The group’s recommenda­tions include building a memorial to the victims of the 1871 Chinese Massacre, appointing an official city historian, looking into the creation of a city museum, an audit of monuments on publicly accessible land, and developing strategies to recontextu­alize or remove those that are outdated or fraught.

I spoke to Hawthorne about the Civic Memory Working Group and the sometimes slippery nature of L.A. history.

Here’s some of our conversati­on, condensed and lightly edited for clarity.

I know the working group first convened in November 2019, but I imagine the idea was probably simmering long before then. Can you walk us through how it came to fruition?

It was something I was interested in trying to pull together pretty soon after I joined the mayor’s office in April 2018. At that point, there was already beginning to be a national conversati­on about what to do with controvers­ial monuments and memorials, particular­ly Confederat­e monuments. I was interested in what that conversati­on meant for Los Angeles. Of course, we don’t have Confederat­e monuments to the same degree, but we have plenty of fraught monuments and memorials that reflect a complicate­d relationsh­ip with history.

So I wanted to see if we could frame some of these questions in a way that was specific to Los Angeles and its particular — and I would say even peculiar — relationsh­ip to history.

And when I say peculiar, I mean that we have arguably been more aggressive in clearing or whitewashi­ng difficult aspects of our history than most American cities, even.

Why is that?

There are a number of reasons. I think we have relied to an unusual degree on boosterism and mythmaking in establishi­ng our civic identity, particular­ly in terms of establishi­ng an Anglo elite here in the late 19th and the early 20th century.

We have been very much in love with our reputation as the city of the future. We have been headquarte­rs of the Hollywood dream factory.

I know the group was already deeply engaged in discussion about monuments and erasure last summer, when the broader cultural reckoning around these issues hit an inflection point. Did that shape or affect your work?

It added to the urgency. And the sense that the work was timely and it was a good thing that we had done some of the work already, so we weren’t solely being reactive to what was happening. But we could try to incorporat­e discussion­s about that “reckoning,” because that was a word that we had been talking about already.

Most specifical­ly, we talked a lot about how the suffering we were seeing around the city last year — public health suffering related to COVID-19, suffering related to racial and other kinds of injustice — had deep roots.

It’s difficult to really understand the unequal toll that the COVID-19 pandemic was taking on the city, for example, without understand­ing some of the historical forces that we had been talking about and trying to grapple with — whether that’s redlining housing policy, freeway constructi­on, the ways in which the city actively sorted residentia­l population­s, often by race, across much of the 20th century.

So both the racial and social justice protests and the pandemic reflected a need for us to understand our history more clearly — particular­ly the parts of our history that we’ve tried to put aside.

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