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Hurricane Katrina blasted the Gulf Coast in 2005, leaving an
unparalleled trail of physical destruction. In addition to that
damage, the storm wrought massive psychological and cultural trauma
on Gulf Coast residents and on America as a whole. Details of the
devastation were quickly reported-and misreported-by media outlets,
and a slew of articles and books followed, offering a spectrum of
socio-political commentaries and analyses. But beyond the reportage
and the commentary, a series of fictional and creative accounts of
the Katrina-experience have emerged in various mediums: novels,
plays, films, television shows, songs, graphic novels, collections
of photographs, and works of creative non-fiction that blur the
lines between reportage, memoir, and poetry. The creative
outpouring brings to mind Salman Rushdie's observation that, "Man
is the storytelling animal, the only creature on earth that tells
itself stories to understand what kind of creature it is." This
book accepts the urge behind Rushdie's formula: humans tell stories
in order to understand ourselves, our world, and our place in it.
Indeed, the creative output on Katrina represents efforts to
construct a cohesive narrative out of the wreckage of a cataclysmic
event. However, this book goes further than merely cataloguing the
ways that Katrina narratives support Rushdie's rich claim. This
collection represents a concentrated attempt to chart the effects
of Katrina on our cultural identity; it seeks to not merely
catalogue the trauma of the event but to explore the ways that such
an event functions in and on the literature that represents it. The
body of work that sprung out of Katrina offers a unique critical
opportunity to better understand the genres that structure our
stories and the ways stories reflect and produce culture and
identity. These essays raise new questions about the representative
genres themselves. The stories are efforts to represent and
understand the human condition, but so are the organizing
principles that communicate the stories. That is,
Katrina-narratives present an opportunity to interrogate the ways
that specific narrative structures inform our understanding and
develop our cultural identity. This book offers a critical
processing of the newly emerging and diverse canon of Katrina
texts.
Sustainability and the City: Urban Poetics and Politics contributes
to third-generation discourse on sustainable development by
considering, through a humanistic lens, theories and practices of
sustainability in a wide range of urban cultures. It demonstrates
cities' inextricability from discussions on sustainability because
not only is the world urbanizing at an unprecedented rate but also
cities are primary locations of the circulation of excess capital,
socioeconomic divisions and hierarchies, political resistance,
friction between human and non-human worlds, and the confluence of
art, policy, and identity formation in placemaking. With essays by
scholars working in a variety of fields-from architecture to
literature to music to sociology-this collection maintains that any
hope for achieving urban sustainability will require taking
seriously the ways in which cities are imagined. Efforts to make
cities sustainable must fully incorporate the humanities because
critical endeavors and creative expressions that fall within the
purview of the humanities are vital to closing the conceptual gulf,
as well as the practical gap, between human and non-human
conservation. Even if the environmental humanities embrace cities,
critics must ask whether coalescing the terms 'sustainability' and
'city' may actually obstruct human action to combat climate
change-which, from some angles, seems impending, self-imposed
apocalypse. To examine the urban turn, Sustainability and the City
attends to culture. Essays in the first part of the collection
approach urban sustainability from various disciplinary vantage
points to emphasize history, ideology, pedagogy, and critical
theory. The second part of the collection analyzes urban commons on
four different continents. Finally, the collection moves from a
diverse set of interpretations of on-the-ground urban phenomena to
a compilation of readings of sustainability in different media and
genres-sound art, drama, fiction, and film-set in, or evocative of,
cities. The collection carves out a place for artists and critics
to help realize social justice in cities, which generate remarkable
power, but power that is too often and too easily used
destructively, unfairly, and wastefully despite cities' unique
capacities to inspire and sustain humanity.
Hurricane Katrina blasted the Gulf Coast in 2005, leaving an
unparalleled trail of physical destruction. In addition to that
damage, the storm wrought massive psychological and cultural trauma
on Gulf Coast residents and on America as a whole. Details of the
devastation were quickly reported-and misreported-by media outlets,
and a slew of articles and books followed, offering a spectrum of
socio-political commentaries and analyses. But beyond the reportage
and the commentary, a series of fictional and creative accounts of
the Katrina-experience have emerged in various mediums: novels,
plays, films, television shows, songs, graphic novels, collections
of photographs, and works of creative non-fiction that blur the
lines between reportage, memoir, and poetry. The creative
outpouring brings to mind Salman Rushdie's observation that, "Man
is the storytelling animal, the only creature on earth that tells
itself stories to understand what kind of creature it is." This
book accepts the urge behind Rushdie's formula: humans tell stories
in order to understand ourselves, our world, and our place in it.
Indeed, the creative output on Katrina represents efforts to
construct a cohesive narrative out of the wreckage of a cataclysmic
event. However, this book goes further than merely cataloguing the
ways that Katrina narratives support Rushdie's rich claim. This
collection represents a concentrated attempt to chart the effects
of Katrina on our cultural identity; it seeks to not merely
catalogue the trauma of the event but to explore the ways that such
an event functions in and on the literature that represents it. The
body of work that sprung out of Katrina offers a unique critical
opportunity to better understand the genres that structure our
stories and the ways stories reflect and produce culture and
identity. These essays raise new questions about the representative
genres themselves. The stories are efforts to represent and
understand the human condition, but so are the organizing
principles that communicate the stories. That is,
Katrina-narratives present an opportunity to interrogate the ways
that specific narrative structures inform our understanding and
develop our cultural identity. This book offers a critical
processing of the newly emerging and diverse canon of Katrina
texts.
The Good Life and the Greater Good in a Global Context offers a
timely contribution to the debates about the good life that
surround us every day in the media, politics, the humanities, and
social sciences. The authors' examine the relationship between the
good life and the greater good as represented across different
genres, media, cultures, and disciplines. This enables them to
develop a framework of values that transcends the overly rational
and individualistic model of the good life advanced by
neoliberalism and the "happiness industry." Thus, over and against
normative conceptualizations of the good life that reduce meaning
to money, creativity to consumption, and compassion to self-help,
the contributors propose an ethically charged philosophy of living
that views the care for the self, for the other, and for the planet
as the catalysts of true human flourishing. In addition to
recovering the original usage of "the good life" from classical
thought-especially the Aristotelian understanding of eudaimonia as
living well and doing well-the essays gathered here highlight its
entanglement with distinctly modern ideas of happiness, wellbeing,
flourishing, progress, revolution, democracy, the American Dream,
utopia, and sustainability. As such, the essays capture the breadth
and depth of the conversation about the good life that is of
central importance to how we relate to the past, engage the
present, and envision the future.
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