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Pacific Eldorado: A History of Greater California

ISBN: 978-1-405-19454-9

December 2012

Wiley-Blackwell

440 pages

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Description
PACIFIC ELDORADO

PACIFIC ELDORADO A HISTORY OF GREATER CALIFORNIA

California‘s rich and complex history has long been shaped by its relationship with the vast ocean along its western shores. Pacific Eldorado: A History of Greater California presents the first comprehensive text to explore the entire sweep of California‘s past in relationship to the maritime world of the Pacific Basin. Noted historian Thomas J. Osborne dispels the commonly held notion of pre-Gold Rush California as a remote and isolated backwater. He traces the evolution of America‘s most populous state from the time of prehistoric Asian seafarers and sixteenth-century Spanish explorers through to its emergence in the modern world as a region whose unmatched resources and global influence have rendered it a veritable super state — a Greater California whose history has far exceeded its geographical boundaries. Interspersed throughout the text are “Pacific Profiles,” brief chronicles of notable figures who have made an impact on the state‘s history. At once scholarly and accessible, Pacific Eldorado offers a strikingly original interpretation of the origins and evolution of an extraordinary American state.

About the Author

Thomas J. Osborne is Emeritus Professor of History at Santa Ana College, where he received the inaugural Distinguished Faculty Lecturer Award. He earned his Ph.D. in history from Claremont Graduate University and is the author and co-author of a number of scholarly publications, including Paths to the Present:Thoughts on the Contemporary Relevance of America‘s Past (co-authored with Fred R. Mabbutt) and “Empire Can Wait”: American Opposition to Hawaiian Annexation, 1893-1898.

Features
• Presents a provocative and original interpretation of the entire span of California history
• Reveals how the area’s Pacific Basin connections have shaped the Golden State’s past
• Refutes the widely held notion among historians that California was isolated before the onset of the American period in the mid-1800s
• Represents the first text to draw on anthropologist Jon Erlandson’s findings that California’s first human inhabitants were likely prehistoric Asian seafarers who navigated the Pacific Rim coastline