Field Notes from the Flood Zone

Field Notes from the Flood Zone

Author: Heather Sellers

Publisher: BOA Editions

Published: 2022

Total Pages:

ISBN-13: 9781950774586

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"Drawn from daily observations, Heather Sellers's poems ponder the changing Florida Coast as the population swells and the waters rise"--


The Present State of the Garden

The Present State of the Garden

Author: Heather Sellers

Publisher:

Published: 2021-10

Total Pages: 80

ISBN-13: 9780899241807

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Winner of the 2020 Blue Lynx Prize for Poetry In The Present State of the Garden, both childhood and the natural world are elegized as the speaker works through layers of loss: the dissolution of a marriage and a world on the brink of ecological collapse. She attempts to patch together some kind of new Eden in these aftermaths and to make a home and family from the remnants?memories from girlhood, a stray aunt and a niece, and what?s left of her small, once lush garden after the punishing storms of summer. The Present State of the Garden is a clear-eyed, open-hearted poetic memoir.


Underwater

Underwater

Author: Rebecca Elliott

Publisher: Columbia University Press

Published: 2021-01-05

Total Pages: 192

ISBN-13: 0231548818

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Communities around the United States face the threat of being underwater. This is not only a matter of rising waters reaching the doorstep. It is also the threat of being financially underwater, owning assets worth less than the money borrowed to obtain them. Many areas around the country may become economically uninhabitable before they become physically unlivable. In Underwater, Rebecca Elliott explores how families, communities, and governments confront problems of loss as the climate changes. She offers the first in-depth account of the politics and social effects of the U.S. National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP), which provides flood insurance protection for virtually all homes and small businesses that require it. In doing so, the NFIP turns the risk of flooding into an immediate economic reality, shaping who lives on the waterfront, on what terms, and at what cost. Drawing on archival, interview, ethnographic, and other documentary data, Elliott follows controversies over the NFIP from its establishment in the 1960s to the present, from local backlash over flood maps to Congressional debates over insurance reform. Though flood insurance is often portrayed as a rational solution for managing risk, it has ignited recurring fights over what is fair and valuable, what needs protecting and what should be let go, who deserves assistance and on what terms, and whose expectations of future losses are used to govern the present. An incisive and comprehensive consideration of the fundamental dilemmas of moral economy underlying insurance, Underwater sheds new light on how Americans cope with loss as the water rises.