
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
What is it like to lose your front porch to the ocean? To watch salt water destroy your favorite fishing holes? To see playgrounds and churches subside and succumb to brackish and rising water? The residents of coastal Louisiana know. For them hurricanes are but exclamation points in an incessant loss of coastal land now estimated to occur at a rate of at least twenty-four square miles per year. In Losing Ground, coastal Louisianans communicate the significance of place and environment. During interviews taken just before the 2005 hurricanes, they send out a plea to alleviate the damage. They speak with an urgency that exemplifies a fear of losing not just property and familiar surroundings, but their identity as well. People along Louisiana's southeastern coast hold a deep attachment to place, and this shows in the urgency of the narratives David M. Burley collects here. The meanings that residents attribute to coastal land loss reflect a tenuous and uprooted sense of self. The process of coastal land loss and all its social components, from the familial to the political, impacts these residents' concepts of history and the future. Burley updates many of his subjects' narratives to reveal what has happened in the wake of the back-to-back disasters of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Chapter One Introduction
- Chapter Two Losing Louisiana: A Meditation on Coastal Land Loss
- Chapter Three Communal Histories
- Chapter Four This Is Our Home: Attachment to the Coast
- Chapter Five Seeing It for Themselves
- Chapter Six Saving Place: Residents and Their Environment
- Afterword: The Path Ahead
- Appendix
- Notes
- References
- Index