In this Book

Explosivity: Following What Remains

Book
2025
summary

How explosions across history reveal the violence embedded in San Francisco’s landscape

Offering a novel approach to contemporary landscape studies, Explosivity unearths the hidden legacies of violence that have shaped the physical and cultural environment of the San Francisco Bay area. As he sifts through the historical debris of previous centuries, Javier Arbona-Homar analyzes a series of explosions that took place between 1866 and 2011 to call attention to the scattered remnants of militarism and racialized capitalism embedded in the region’s geography.

From incidents involving nineteenth-century explosives manufacturing and World War II munitions loading to radical activism and contemporary television productions, Arbona-Homar locates a pattern of historical violence that refocuses the broader racial and colonial context. Citing the material, social, and political conditions that gave rise to these disparate episodes, he reviews the historic erasure of those driving forces and puts forth alternative possibilities for how such disasters might be memorialized.

Synthesizing a diverse set of field research methods, including oral histories and site visits, and supplemented by specially commissioned landscape photographs by Andrea Gaffney, Explosivity presents a radical exercise in the exposition of public memory.

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Table of Contents

Cover

Half Title Page, Title Page, Copyright

pp. i-iv

Contents

pp. v-vi

Preface

pp. vii-xii

Map

pp. xiii-xiv

Introduction: Package

pp. 1-28

1. Suspect

pp. 29-52

2. Punishment

pp. 53-74

3. Memorial

pp. 75-100

4. Landscape

pp. 101-132

5. Accident

pp. 133-158

Conclusion: Remains

pp. 159-188

Acknowledgments

pp. 189-196

Notes

pp. 197-238

Index

pp. 239-254

Author Biographies

pp. 255
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