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Los Angeles
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Los Angeles is one of the most studied American cities across academic disciplines, appearing in coursework ranging from urban studies and sociology to history, business, and cultural studies. Its size, diversity, and role as a global economic and cultural hub make it a compelling subject for academic inquiry. Students examine the city through lenses as varied as racial politics, urban development, immigration, entertainment, and public policy, reflecting how Los Angeles functions as a microcosm of broader American tensions and transformations.

Papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some focus on historical events, such as the Los Angeles Riot of 1965, analyzing causes, consequences, and what the episode reveals about race and class in urban California. Others take a cultural or demographic angle, with Chicano Studies perspectives offering close readings of identity and community life in the city. Additional papers address urban planning, real estate, business development, and the dynamics of world cities, treating Los Angeles as a case study in growth, inequality, and global connectivity.

A strong essay on Los Angeles benefits from a clearly scoped thesis that connects the city's specific conditions to a larger argument — about race, urban form, economic development, or cultural production, for example. Evidence drawn from historical records, demographic data, policy documents, or primary source accounts tends to carry the most weight. A common pitfall is treating Los Angeles as simply representative of all American cities; effective essays acknowledge what makes the city distinctive rather than flattening its contradictions into generic claims about urban life.

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LA Is a Very Diverse
LA is a very diverse city, world-class, and a city that faces a number of challenges for the 21st century. There are so many different ways to see this city. It is fascinating and it is frustrating.
Paper Undergraduate
Public housing systems and policy frameworks
While at least a great deal of the motivation behind public housing in the United States has probably been good, the results have often fallen very short of good, or even adequate. Stalinesque is one of the more…
Essay Doctorate
Fine Arts Los Angeles Fine Arts Building
"Form follows function" may be a cliché nowadays, one that's parroted in chic commercials for high-end, luxury sedans, but at some point, before the phrase devolved into a catchphrase for Cadillacs, it had real meaning. The architects who designed and built the Los Angeles Fine Arts Building knew what it meant, and they applied that philosophy to their stunning 12-story masterpiece in the city of angels. That issay, the design of the Fine Arts Building not only enriches the architecture, but it gives voice to the activities of the building's original tenants (Several, 1999). It is the purpose of this paper to discuss the elements of architectural style in the Los Angeles Fine Arts Building. But first, here is a brief history of the men behind the masterpiece. The Los Angeles Fine Arts Building was designed by the acclaimed duo of Walker & Eisen; that is Albert R. Walker and Percy A. Eisen. It was built in 1925, during the roaring twenties, a time of unprecedented urban growth and construction, and is located at 811 West 7th Street in downtown Los Angeles. The Building was designed to be more than just a building, but a cultural Mecca for artists, bohemians, and other visionaries of Los Angeles (Several, 1999). The ultimate goal of Walker & Eisen was to create an ideal place (one that was a work of art in and of itself) where people could create, showcase and enjoy art. The first thing one notices about the Fine Arts Building is its Romanesque style. Even if one doesn't know the term "Romanesque" he/she knows that this building is different. This building is not created equal. It's clear, given its context, that this building is different than the other non-descript buildings that surround it. The carefully wrought, semi-circular, two-story arch of the façade tell the visitor that he/she is about to experience something special. Upon closer inspection, this sensation is only accented by the present but not imposing architectural sculptures on the building's exterior. On the terracotta arch itself the visitor is confronted by an array of different stylized birds, griffins, gargoyles, and flowers. On other parts of the façade there are sculptures of flute players and other assorted fantastic creatures (Several 1999). It can be argued that this attention to detail is not something a resident of Los Angeles is used to seeing manifested in local architecture. These details continue on. Both as one looks up the towering edifice and as one prepares to enter its mouth. There are two large terracotta figures representing "Architecture" on the viewer's left and "Sculpture" on the viewer's right, both of these sculptures lean into the ledges on the third story. The inimitable Burt Johnson was commissioned to create these beauties. As one's eyes continue up, there are two nude figures perched on 9th story ledges and two 12' high panels titled "Inspiration" mark the 12th story (LA Conservatory). As one enters the Fine Arts Building, there are more touches of Burt Johnson. That is, seventeen bronze figures line the foyer and the corridor, which eventually leads to, as it's been described, a "Spanish Renaissance ‘courtyard' lobby with a galleried mezzanine" and fountain (Several, 1999). To say that the lobby is spectacular would be an understatement. However, before one goes on to detail the less quantifiable aspects of the Building (traffic flow, appeal to the senses, aesthetics, etc.) a quick point should be made about the materials used to create this awe-inspiring aggregate effect. As mentioned, much of the façade is created from tile and terracotta block to give the effect of stone. Initially, Walker & Eisen wanted to use stone, but opted for terracotta because it was more malleable and would allow for the detailed ornamentation they had envisioned (SOURCE). The large front doors are bronze, which carries on or, depending on one's perspective, initiates the bronze theme throughout the Building. Despite these rather "heavy" medieval or church-like materials, the building has weightlessness to it. That is to say one doesn't feel cloistered in its environs, like the way one does when attending a Catholic Mass. The lobby's high, two-story ceilings uplift one's spirit while shifting focus to the artwork displayed around the capacious room. The colored tiles are rich, but not overbearing on the senses. The fountain in the center of the room, with its purling waters also gives the place a vitality lacking in other Romanesque buildings (consider the staid and placid stoups filled with holy water at a different churches vs. the fountain in the Fine Arts Building with the bronze figures dancing about its circumference). The lines in the Building are symmetrical, but not stifling. In other words, the hard angles do not emphasize conformity over creativity. Instead they show a structure that is arguably sensitive to the soul of an artist. The beautiful columns draw the outward and up, not inward and down. Again, the intent of the building is vocalized by way of its care and attention to detail. This is a place for artists. This is a climate for creative people. This is a destination for deliverance. What's ironic though, is shortly after the building was constructed it was converted to an office building. After the market crashed in 1929, the Great Depression sunk in and monetary concerns became a priority. A malaise of pedestrian worries clouded the cultural milieu. Art took a back seat to business and commerce. The Fine Arts building was renamed by each of its successive owners: The Signal Oil Building, the Havenstrite Building, and Global Marine House. Thankfully though, in 1983 it was purchased by Ratkovich Bowers and Perez and completely restored to its original beauty (Vincent, 2008). Today, when one looks at the Fine Arts Building, he/she knows that it was constructed with a purpose in mind, and that purpose was painstakingly incorporated into every square inch of the building's design, from the materials, to layout, to the ornamentation, to the sensory appeal, etc. The Fine Arts Building is a treasure to behold and a testament do architecture that embraces the notion that form should always follow function. Works Cited Several, M. (1999, November). Fine arts building background information . Retrieved from http://www.publicartinla.com/Downtown/FineArts/background.html Los Angeles Conservancy Tours. (n.d). Los Angeles Fine Arts Building. Retrieved from http://www.laconservancy.org/tours/downtown/finearts.php4. Vincent, R. (2008, May 27). Fine Arts Building Los Angeles Attorneys to Do Justice to Fine Arts Building. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved from http://articles.latimes.com/2008/may/27/business/fi-attorneys27.
Research Paper Doctorate
Michael Jordan in March 2005,
In March 2005, a Harris Poll revealed that Michael Jordan is once again America's favorite sports star even though he has been retired since 2002 (Michael pp). No athlete today seems to transcend the game as Jordan once…
Paper Undergraduate
Woodstock Modern and Topical Interpretations
Modern and topical interpretations of the rock an roll era, including but not limited to the culminating events which played out at Woodstock, and its less well-known cousin Altamont are varied, demonstrating the…
Research Paper Doctorate
Police Women and Maternity Leave
Female Police Officers and Maternity Leave
Research Paper Doctorate
Robert Townes' Chinatown and the American dream
Chinatown is a vision of the historic degradation of Los Angeles and the American dream. Contrary to the simple, monocentric view of a city put forth by Robert Park, Towne's interpretation of Los Angeles is more…
Paper Undergraduate
Integrity, Validity and Ethics Within
The advent of online-courses and to a greater extent online-universities have driven traditional brick and mortar universities to integrate online-courses into their teaching pedagogy.
Paper Doctorate
United States Deaf Olympics Deaf Olympics While
While sport is vital in anyone's life, it may be even of great significance to the individual with a disability. This is due to sport's rehabilitative power to affect persons especially power based on prestige and because sport may be a means of including an individual into society. The American Athletic Association of the Deaf recognized this and began a new approach to rehabilitating people with hearing impairment (Deaf People) by means of establishing and introducing the Deaf Olympics and other sporting events.
Research Paper Doctorate
Strategy for Exporting a U.S. Product to Venezuela
¶ … exporting water filters to Venezuela will vary depending on the size of the initial entry into the Venezuelan market: whether the entire country is targeted or just the principal cities.