Skip to main content
Article
Jim Rockford or Tony Soprano: Coastal Contrasts in American Suburbia
Pacific Historical Review
  • Carl Abbott, Portland State University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-1-2014
Subjects
  • Rockford files (Television program),
  • Sopranos (Television program),
  • Suburbs,
  • Popular culture
Abstract

Both in television shows such as The Rockford Files and The Sopranos and in the fiction of writers such as John Updike, Richard Ford, and Douglas Coupland, popular culture draws a distinction between Atlantic Coast and Pacific Coast suburbs. The differences revolve around two themes. The first concerns the roles of place and space. The second is the varying weight of history, often as manifested through families and social ties. Eastern suburbs and suburbanites are commonly depicted as embedded in place, rooted in time, and entangled in social networks. Western suburbs and suburbanites are often imagined as the opposite—isolated in space, atemporal, and free (or bereft) of social bonds.

* This was his presidential address at the annual meeting of the Pacific Coast Branch, American Historical Association, in Denver, Colorado, on August 10,2013.

Description

This is the publisher's final PDF. © 2014 by the Pacific Coast Branch, American Historical Association. All rights reserved. Please direct all requests for permission to photocopy or reproduce article content through the University of California Press’s Rights and Permissions website, at http://www.ucpressjournals. com/reprintinfo.asp

DOI
10.1525/phr.2014.83.1.1
Persistent Identifier
http://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/12841
Citation Information
Abbott, C. (2014). Jim Rockford or Tony Soprano: Coastal Contrasts in American Suburbia. Pacific Historical Review, Vol. 83, No. 1, pp. 1-23.