Readings in California Civilization: Interpretative Issues
By
Howard A. DeWitt. Dubuque: Kendall/Hunt Publishing Co., 1981.
Photographs. 222 pages. $12.95.
Reviewed by Clare V. McKanna, Instructor of California
history at San Diego Evening College (Mesa Campus).
Practically every university, state college, and community
college in California offers a history course covering the development of
California's heritage and institutions from 1769 to the present. There are many
textbooks detailing the movements of Spanish, Mexican, and Anglo-American
immigrants who settled in California, but few of them provide adequate reading
material on various specific topics that might capture the history of a given
period. Readers have been written to supplement these textbooks, yet few have
adequately fulfilled this purpose. Most of the readers provide, at best, a
glimpse of what it was like to live in the Gold Rush era, the Hispanic halcyon
days, or the depression years of the Joads. This new work by Howard A. DeWitt
held out the hope that a new road would be opened for historians who, like
myself, have been looking for a reader with more substance and depth that would cover topics with greater
detail and meaning. Unfortunately, DeWitt's reader on California does not
completely deliver.
To his credit, the author does provide a chapter on the
Native American's role in California history, but the readings are so short that
we do not gain the true meaning of what it was like to be an Indian under
Hispanic or Anglo control. What was it really like to be under the lash during
the Spanish era? How did the Native Americans react to punishment? Were they
able to adapt to European civilization? What happened when the Anglos replaced
the Hispanics? These are the questions that should be asked in any California
history class. The answers come only with well chosen readings that cover in
depth the problems encountered by the Native Americans. Still, there are no
readers that give the answers to these and other questions.
DeWitt does cover nine specific issues ranging from Native
Americans, Mexican California, the Gold Rush, and the Railroad Era to Race,
Labor, and Student Rights. The readings are arranged to cover as broad a
perspective as possible. The author uses some of his own useful articles and
includes items by such diverse writers as Hubert Howe Bancroft, Theodora
Kroeber, Allan Nevins, Carey McWilliams, Gerald Stanley, and Richard H.
Peterson. However, the readings are often too brief and do not give the reader a
real feel for the period covered. It would seem more logical to cover the topics
in more depth with fewer selections.
In defense of the author, he has provided pertinent material
that can be used to explain various trends in California history. The book is
well illustrated and includes excellent documentation on minority groups. A
bibliography of other readings would have been useful. In conclusion, DeWitt has
filled a void by providing a reader for the typical California historian. During
a time when few readers have been forthcoming, we should welcome this new work.