A muckraking history of San Diego that covers the city’s historically recent shift from politically conservative to politically progressive while also outlining a new cast of right-wing villains and tenacious activists fighting for social justice.
San Diego is a sunny paradise for over thirty million tourists each year. But America’s eighth largest metropolis conceals a vast dark side of militarization, economic inequality, municipal corruption, and racial injustice. This updated and expanded edition of Under the Perfect Sun contains three muckraking essays that expose the underbelly of this city and interrogate its recent political turn.
Mike Davis outlines the making and re-making of San Diego by a series of largely unchecked local plutocrats, from the snarling Republicans of old to what he calls “high tech . . . opportunist Clinton Democracy.” He moves from John D. Spreckels’ crushing dissent amidst the Free Speech Fight during the Progressive era to a new class of politically shapeshifting business elites ushering in the “tidal wave of gentrification” that continues to this day. Jim Miller offers a bottom-up, peoples’ history of San Diego from the perspective of activists of all stripes—workers, immigrants, civil rights, and anti-war advocates—seeking to challenge the local hegemony. And oral historian Kelly Mayhew sketches life in this tourist wonderland with a series of interviews that reveal the “Other San Diego,” including stories from a wide range of local activists and everyday citizens who share the reality of living in San Diego.
This twentieth-anniversary edition is an ode to one of America’s most complex cities.

