Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Race, Environment, and Crisis: Hurricane Camille and the Politics of Southern Segregation
View through CrossRef
In August 1969 Hurricane Camille hit the Mississippi coast. We argue that the disaster caused by the Hurricane was an outcome of the entanglement between human and non-human agents. As a non-human agent, Hurricane Camille thrust the prevailing socio-economic situation in the segregationist South into the spotlight, with all its political and cultural ramifications – much to the annoyance of the local political elite that had long sought to isolate southern politics from civil rights and the desegregation agenda. Consequently, it (re)invigorated and furnished the civil rights movement and the politics defining that era with new arguments and approaches that would have been impossible to develop from the perspective of human agency alone. By examining both local and national press discourses relating to the crisis caused by Hurricane Camille in the state of Mississippi in August 1969, we argue that historical agency should not be seen in purely anthropocentric terms but as an entanglement between human and non-human events.
Title: Race, Environment, and Crisis: Hurricane Camille and the Politics of Southern Segregation
Description:
In August 1969 Hurricane Camille hit the Mississippi coast.
We argue that the disaster caused by the Hurricane was an outcome of the entanglement between human and non-human agents.
As a non-human agent, Hurricane Camille thrust the prevailing socio-economic situation in the segregationist South into the spotlight, with all its political and cultural ramifications – much to the annoyance of the local political elite that had long sought to isolate southern politics from civil rights and the desegregation agenda.
Consequently, it (re)invigorated and furnished the civil rights movement and the politics defining that era with new arguments and approaches that would have been impossible to develop from the perspective of human agency alone.
By examining both local and national press discourses relating to the crisis caused by Hurricane Camille in the state of Mississippi in August 1969, we argue that historical agency should not be seen in purely anthropocentric terms but as an entanglement between human and non-human events.
Related Results
Stream Segregation and Peripheral Channeling
Stream Segregation and Peripheral Channeling
Two interleaved melodies, with theory tones alternating as ABAB..., can be individually followed and identified if auditory stream segregation takes place. Stream segregation can o...
Notes and Comments On C. Vann Woodward
Notes and Comments On C. Vann Woodward
C. Vann Woodward, who is ninety on 13 November 1998, is the author
of
perhaps the most famous work of history every to have rocked the Southern
United States. The Strange Caree...
Socio-spatial Disparities and the Crisis: Swimming Pools as a Proxy of Class Segregation in Athens
Socio-spatial Disparities and the Crisis: Swimming Pools as a Proxy of Class Segregation in Athens
AbstractInitially considered a ‘luxury’ good and now becoming a more popular and diffused landmark, the spatial distribution of residential swimming pools reflects the socio-spatia...
The Race-Religion Constellation: A European Contribution to the Critical Philosophy of Race
The Race-Religion Constellation: A European Contribution to the Critical Philosophy of Race
Abstract
This article traces the hidden race-religion constellation in Europe. The term “race-religion constellation” refers to the connection or co-constitution of ...
Race and the Senses: Toward Articulating the Sensory Apparatus of Race
Race and the Senses: Toward Articulating the Sensory Apparatus of Race
Abstract
This article provides a preliminary exploration into the relationship between the bodily senses and race. Seeking insight into what Merleau-Ponty called a b...
Navigating the school system in Sweden, Belgium, Austria and Germany: School segregation and second generation school trajectories
Navigating the school system in Sweden, Belgium, Austria and Germany: School segregation and second generation school trajectories
In this article we describe and explain how children of immigrants navigate their educational careers. Sequence analyses followed by optimal matching is used to cluster individual ...
Disrupting gatekeeping practices: Journalists’ source selection in times of crisis
Disrupting gatekeeping practices: Journalists’ source selection in times of crisis
As gatekeepers, journalists have the power to select the sources that get a voice in crisis coverage. The aim of this study is to find out how journalists select sources during a c...
RIGHTS AND SLAVERY, RACE AND RACISM: LEO STRAUSS, THE STRAUSSIANS, AND THE AMERICAN DILEMMA
RIGHTS AND SLAVERY, RACE AND RACISM: LEO STRAUSS, THE STRAUSSIANS, AND THE AMERICAN DILEMMA
My interest here is in the way Leo Strauss (1899–1973) and his followers, the Straussians, have dealt with race and rights, race and slavery in the history of the United States. I ...