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Ruinopolis: Post‐Imperial Theory and Learning from Las Vegas
Authors:Julia Hell  George Steinmetz
Institution:1. Department of German, University of Michigan, , Ann Arbor, MI, 48109 USA;2. Department of Sociology, University of Michigan, , Ann Arbor, MI, 48104 USA
Abstract:This essay foregrounds a dimension of Las Vegas that other authors only touch on in passing: its connections to empire. The authors propose a post‐imperial analysis of the city based on a reconstruction of its history and a reading of the traces of this history in the city's architecture and its self‐presentation in American popular culture. This analysis of Las Vegas as ruinopolis draws attention to the ruin sites of the city and its hinterland, reading them through the lens of empire. We work out the imperial territoriality of Las Vegas, including the derelict space of the Las Vegas Paiute Indian Colony, the ‘Pentagon Desert’ around the city with its so‐called ‘national sacrifice zone’, and the Strip, with Caesars Palace. We conclude with a post‐imperial reading of Venturi, Scott Brown and Izenour's canonical Learning from Las Vegas and of the ruin signs of the Neon Boneyard.
Keywords:Las Vegas  Post‐imperial studies  Learning from Las Vegas (Robert Venturi  Denise Scott Brown and Steven Izenour)  Neon Museum (Las Vegas)  Caesars Palace (Las Vegas)  Ruins  US Empire
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