Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Cause for joy in aftermath of disaster
A Paradise Built in Hell
The Extraordinary Communities
That Arise in Disaster
By Rebecca Solnit
Viking, 368 pages, $35
There are surely few Manitobans who lived through the 1997 flood who cannot recall stories of selflessness as Manitobans came together to hold back the waters, even as some lost their homes and possessions.
As American journalist Rebecca Solnit reveals in this riveting, important and inspiring book, this spirit of caring -- even joy -- in the face of disaster is actually the norm.
In case after case, she finds that sudden calamities tend to generate "disaster utopias," which reveal exciting social possibilities for a more just society.
By contrast, Solnit finds the Hollywood version of disaster -- replete with widespread panic, looting and violence -- is almost nonexistent in the real world, and where it does occur it is owed to institutional failure and repressive overreaction on the part of governments.
The San Franciscan's earlier works include the gentrification exposé Hollow City: The Siege of San Francisco and the Crisis of American Urbanism.
Here she takes the reader through a number of historically significant disasters over the past century. Through archival research, numerous interviews with survivors and frequent references to disaster sociologists, Solnit constructs an alternative and radical narrative of calamity.
For each disaster covered (the 1906 San Francisco earthquake; the 1917 Halifax explosion; the 1985 Mexico City earthquake; 9/11; and hurricane Katrina), Solnit explores a series of themes, which she then connects to other disasters, social theories and contemporary events.
As a writer on the progressive left, Solnit has created a "people's history" of urban destruction, which shows how extraordinary acts of empowerment and social capacity-building can emerge from disaster, and with them the erasure of the caustic distinctions of class and race.
Solnit tells of the legendary generosity following the Halifax explosion, and how the failure of the Mexican government to respond to the 1985 earthquake there led to a nationwide political awakening, which eventually broke the decades-long grip on power of the PRI (Institutional Revolution) party.
She also recounts the heroic actions taken by the passengers of Flight 93 on 9/11, and contrasts them painfully with then-president George W. Bush's initial non-response to the attacks, and the Air Force's inexplicable inability to prevent the strike on the Pentagon.
Such institutional failure is compounded, in Solnit's view, by the tendency of governments and other elites to panic when calamity strikes.
By expecting the worst from people, governments can turn disasters into catastrophes.
By far the most disturbing part of Solnit's book is her extensive and ground-breaking investigation into the aftermath of hurricane Katrina.
Amid wild, racist and unfounded media rumours of black gangs rampaging through the streets of New Orleans and the Superdome, whites armed themselves and began shooting black men on sight. Solnit documents dozens of such murders, about which officials have yet to take action.
Yet even in the poisonous ruins of New Orleans, Solnit still manages to find irrepressible joy as people rebuild their homes.
This recurring spirit of common purpose and generosity leads to her principal and troubling question: what is it about our everyday society that prevents such social possibilities from taking root permanently?
As our cities become more vulnerable to extreme weather and climate change, Solnit warns we will face successive and intensifying disasters.
Unless we combine practical training for dealing with calamity with an official recognition of our tendency for mutual support and aid, rather than for violence and looting, the "elite panic" she describes will lead to ever more terrible consequences.
Michael Dudley is a research associate and library co-ordinator at the Institute of Urban Studies at the University of Winnipeg.
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition September 6, 2009 B9
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