"Winner of the 2005 Best Book in Urban Affairs, Urban Affairs Association"
"Winner of the 2004 Ralph J. Bunche Award, American Political Science Association"
"American Babylon traces the dialectic of suburbanization and black power in my hometown of Oakland, California. Encapsulating the postwar history of hundreds of mid-sized American cities, Robert Self's original and fascinating case study historicizes city-suburb racial segregation as a creation within living memory. We cannot heal or make sense of the nation we live in now without American Babylon."—Nell Irvin Painter, Princeton University, author of Southern History across the Color Line
"By placing the history of Oakland and its African American community in a new theoretical framework that emphasizes suburban growth, tax revolts, and battles over land, jobs, and political power, Self has challenged historians to reconsider the way that they study postwar black urban communities."---Albert S. Broussard, Journal of American History
"If you are concerned with the postwar city, race, economics, and politics, get this book and read it."---Kenneth Durr, American Historical Review
"[A]n original and complex explanation for the urban crisis that transformed Oakland, California, from 1945 to 1978. . . . By placing the history of Oakland and its African American community in a new theoretical framework that emphasizes suburban growth, tax revolts, and battles over land, jobs, and political power, Self has challenged historians to reconsider the way that they study postwar black urban communities."---Albert S. Broussard, Journal of American History
"By grounding his historical narrative in its spatial context, Robert Self offers a new conception of postwar urban history and also of national political history, making it possible to map the relations of social and political power. He has moreover broken free of a traditional limitation of urban histories: rather than limit himself to a single municipality, he tells the story of an entire metropolitan region. This very readable book promises to be highly influential in the fields of urban history, postwar political history, and African American and race relations history."—Philip J. Ethington, University of Southern California, author of The Public City
"Winner of the 2005 James A. Rawley Prize, Organization of American Historians"
"Winner of the 2004 Best Book in North American Urban History, Urban History Association"
"[M]eticulously researched. . . . [A] compelling, complex, and original account of black and, to a lesser extent, white community politics in metropolitan Oakland California from 1945 to 1978."---Cynthia Horan, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
"American Babylon promises to be one of those rare works that redefines the field. Robert Self brilliantly weaves together histories that are usually told separately: political economy, labor, black community formation, suburbanization, and civil rights. His analysis of the relationship between 'black power' and 'white power' opens up a new way of thinking about race, economics, and politics in modern America."—Thomas J. Sugrue, University of Pennsylvania, author of The Origins of the Urban Crisis