Katrina was not just a hurricane. The death, destruction, and
misery wreaked on New Orleans cannot be blamed on nature's fury
alone. This volume of essays locates the root causes of the 2005
disaster squarely in neoliberal restructuring and examines how
pro-market reforms are reshaping life, politics, economy, and the
built environment in New Orleans.
The authors--a diverse group writing from the disciplines of
sociology, political science, education, public policy, and media
theory--argue that human agency and public policy choices were more
at fault for the devastation and mass suffering experienced along
the Gulf Coast than were sheer forces of nature. The harrowing
images of flattened homes, citizens stranded on rooftops, patients
dying in makeshift hospitals, and dead bodies floating in
floodwaters exposed the moral and political contradictions of
neoliberalism--the ideological rejection of the planner state and
the active promotion of a new order of market rule.
Many of these essays offer critical insights on the saga of
postdisaster reconstruction. Challenging triumphal narratives of
civic resiliency and universal recovery, the authors bring to the
fore pitched battles over labor rights, gender and racial justice,
gentrification, the development of city master plans, the
demolition of public housing, policing, the privatization of public
schools, and roiling tensions between tourism-based economic growth
and neighborhood interests. The contributors also expand and deepen
more conventional critiques of "disaster capitalism" to consider
how the corporate mobilization of philanthropy and public good will
are remaking New Orleans in profound and pernicious ways.
Contributors: Barbara L. Allen, Virginia Polytechnic U; John
Arena, CUNY College of Staten Island; Adrienne Dixson, Ohio State
U; Eric Ishiwata, Colorado State U; Avis Jones-Deweever, National
Council of Negro Women; Chad Lavin, Virginia Polytechnic U; Paul
Passavant, Hobart and William Smith Colleges; Linda Robertson,
Hobart and William Smith Colleges; Chris Russill, Carleton U;
Kanchana Ruwanpura, U of Southampton; Nicole Trujillo-Pagan, Wayne
State U; Geoffrey Whitehall, Acadia U.
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