Journal of Alta California

The California Gaze

California is both a state of mind and a physical place, its sensibility shaped by geography, conflict, and experience.

It was the Left Coast even before the Europeans arrived. This slender edge of the continent was the place human beings came after they likely wandered across the Bering Land Bridge and from which they pushed farther south, to warmer weather, richer hunting grounds, on their way, eventually, to the southern tip of South America.

Centuries later, the density and complexity of Indigenous tribes, cultures, and languages in the land west of the High Sierra had become a human continent unto itself.

Merely a few decades after Columbus, the Spaniards came, and then Portuguese ships, followed by Russian fur traders, English navigators, and then, much later, droves of northern Europeans traveling from what we call “back East.” There was Lewis and Clark, although they reached the Pacific Ocean by way of the Columbia River, in present-day Oregon. In the 1820s, Jedediah Smith wandered into San Gabriel from the Mojave Desert. After him came the great land grab of the 1840s, which was hyper-accelerated by the gold rush of the early ’50s—the Silicon Valley boom of its day.

To each era, California offered yet another dream of wealth, an escape from the confines

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Journal of Alta California

Journal of Alta California10 min read
P-22’s Life in l.a.
It’s a real sanctuary, the first I’ve discovered since fleeing my birth den and journeying miles and miles through the most alien, booby-trapped hellscape you can imagine. Sure, there’s danger here, too. I’m hemmed in on all sides of this tiny wilder
Journal of Alta California4 min read
The Slag Heap of History
They finally dismantled the Confederate statues on a summer Saturday morning. Shoppers were heading to Charlottesville’s downtown farmers market when the crane and flatbed truck arrived to cart away the controversial memorials to Robert E. Lee and Th
Journal of Alta California2 min read
Supernova
Thea Matthews was born and raised on Ohlone land, San Francisco. She holds an MFA in poetry from New York University, and her poetry has appeared in Southern Indiana Review, Interim, Tahoma Literary Review, the New Republic, and other publications. C

Related Books & Audiobooks