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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Lacy M. Johnson , Cheryl BeckettPublisher: University of Texas Press Imprint: University of Texas Press Dimensions: Width: 17.80cm , Height: 3.80cm , Length: 25.40cm Weight: 1.220kg ISBN: 9781477325001ISBN 10: 147732500 Pages: 264 Publication Date: 05 July 2022 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsIntroduction: More City Than Water (Lacy M. Johnson) History Gusher (Sonia Hamer) History Displaced: Flooding the First Black Municipality in Texas (Aimee VonBokel with Tanya Debose and Alexandria Parson) Anthropocene City: Houston as Hyperobject (Roy Scranton) If You Didn’t Know Your House Was Sinking (Martha Serpas) Meander Belt: A Native Houstonian Reflects on Water (Elaine Shen) Ombrophobia (Fear of Rain) (Cheryl Beckett) The Task in Front of Us: A Conversation with Raj Mankad (Lacy M. Johnson) Memory Harvey Alerts (Sonia Del Hierro) The Only Thing You Have/Trace of a Trace (Lyric Evans-Hunter) Things That Drown, and Why (Bruno Ríos) Higher Ground (Bryan Washington) The Gallery of Cracked Pavement: A Walking Tour (Dana Kroos) The City That Saved Itself (Allyn West) We All Breathe the Same Air: A Conversation with P. Grace Tee Lewis (Lacy M. Johnson) Community Climate Dignity: Reading Baldwin after Harvey and in the Near Northside (Daniel Peña) Look East (Susan Rogers) Community Power (Ben Hirsch) A Whole City on Stilts: Hydraulic Citizenship in Houston (Dominic Boyer) Suburban Design with Nature (Geneva Vest) Flood Song (Laura August) From Ice to Inundation (Cymene Howe) Lean into the Living World: A Conversation with Alex Ortiz (Lacy M. Johnson) Acknowledgments Notes ContributorsReviews[A] strong anthology...the variety of voices and formats gives the work a sense of breadth. It adds up to a tough, thought-provoking depiction of the wreckage wrought by a changing climate. * Publishers Weekly * [More City Than Water] is beautiful, moving, and, most fundamentally, provocative-a collective portrait of a city defined for good and ill by its relationship to water. * Alta Journal * Houston is the problem and the solution, the dream and the nightmare, the big blue bubble in a still-red state, a global capital for oil production and the most diverse city in the country, a place menaced by future climate catastrophes and the soup bowl into which it already rained sixty-one inches in one storm: 2017's Hurricane Harvey, which is the particular focus here. Nothing less than this brilliant chorus of writers and mapmakers could capture all that range and contradiction; gathered here, they tell of land and water, inequality and solidarity, possibility and threat. Hurricane Harvey reinforced my belief in the power of water, writes marine biologist and native Houstonian Elaine Shen in one of the book's riveting essays, and More City Than Water reinforces my belief in the power of creative atlases. -- Rebecca Solnit, author of A Paradise Built in Hell and lead author of Infinite City: A San Francisco Atlas I was gripped by More City Than Water from start to finish. If you didn't know how the historic flows of water, wealth, and power have shaped Houston and cities like it around the nation, the maps and narratives here can be your guide. And the book is an affirmation for those who have never been able to ignore the toxic seep industrial capitalism leaves some communities to drown in. It's not an easy book to read, but these pages are as insistent and inescapable as water pouring into the bayou. The words and images in More City Than Water insist on nothing but the truth. -- Camille T. Dungy, author of Soil: The History of a Black Mother's Garden This kaleidoscopic essay collection paints an intimate portrait of Houston, Texas, through multiple, and at times divergent, lenses. Houston is ground zero for three of the twenty-first century's defining phenomena--urban development, extraction, and climate change--and as such it has the power to teach us about how people and communities evolve even as the place that unites them changes irrevocably. -- Elizabeth Rush, author of Rising: Dispatches from the New American Shore [A] strong anthology...the variety of voices and formats gives the work a sense of breadth. It adds up to a tough, thought-provoking depiction of the wreckage wrought by a changing climate. * Publishers Weekly * [More City Than Water] is beautiful, moving, and, most fundamentally, provocative-a collective portrait of a city defined for good and ill by its relationship to water. * Alta Journal * More City Than Water should serve as an inspiration for scholars working in the fields of digital and environmental humanities...This book points the way toward imagining 'environmental citizenship' as an essential practice in communities around the world. * Frugal Chariot * Houston is the problem and the solution, the dream and the nightmare, the big blue bubble in a still-red state, a global capital for oil production and the most diverse city in the country, a place menaced by future climate catastrophes and the soup bowl into which it already rained sixty-one inches in one storm: 2017's Hurricane Harvey, which is the particular focus here. Nothing less than this brilliant chorus of writers and mapmakers could capture all that range and contradiction; gathered here, they tell of land and water, inequality and solidarity, possibility and threat. Hurricane Harvey reinforced my belief in the power of water, writes marine biologist and native Houstonian Elaine Shen in one of the book's riveting essays, and More City Than Water reinforces my belief in the power of creative atlases.- Rebecca Solnit, author of A Paradise Built in Hell and lead author of Infinite City: A San Francisco Atlas I was gripped by More City Than Water from start to finish. If you didn't know how the historic flows of water, wealth, and power have shaped Houston and cities like it around the nation, the maps and narratives here can be your guide. And the book is an affirmation for those who have never been able to ignore the toxic seep industrial capitalism leaves some communities to drown in. It's not an easy book to read, but these pages are as insistent and inescapable as water pouring into the bayou. The words and images in More City Than Water insist on nothing but the truth.- Camille T. Dungy, author of Soil: The History of a Black Mother's Garden This kaleidoscopic essay collection paints an intimate portrait of Houston, Texas, through multiple, and at times divergent, lenses. Houston is ground zero for three of the twenty-first century's defining phenomena--urban development, extraction, and climate change--and as such it has the power to teach us about how people and communities evolve even as the place that unites them changes irrevocably.- Elizabeth Rush, author of Rising: Dispatches from the New American Shore [A] strong anthology...the variety of voices and formats gives the work a sense of breadth. It adds up to a tough, thought-provoking depiction of the wreckage wrought by a changing climate. * Publishers Weekly * "What makes the volume cohere so well and become more than the sum of its parts is a shared set of concerns about ""our relationship to the land, to the future, to flooding, and to one another.-- ""Southwestern Historical Quarterly"" (7/6/2023 12:00:00 AM) Excellent.-- ""New York Times"" (4/10/2023 12:00:00 AM) This volume of stories by historians, housing activists, urban planners, climate scientists, marine biologists, poets, artists and longtime residents demonstrate resilience, creativity and even hope.-- ""Austin American-Statesman"" (11/3/2022 12:00:00 AM) [A] strong anthology...the variety of voices and formats gives the work a sense of breadth. It adds up to a tough, thought-provoking depiction of the wreckage wrought by a changing climate.-- ""Publishers Weekly"" (4/21/2022 12:00:00 AM) Never failing their orientation, the band of Houstonians featured in this book eloquently prove the power of the pen by offering a realistic climate poetics. If persistently and repeatedly applied to densely inhabited flood zones, atlases like this one may lead to a global wake-up call whose alarm may even reach the politicians. -- ""The Architect's Newspaper"" (5/19/2023 12:00:00 AM) More City Than Water should serve as an inspiration for scholars working in the fields of digital and environmental humanities...This book points the way toward imagining 'environmental citizenship' as an essential practice in communities around the world.-- ""Frugal Chariot"" (7/12/2022 12:00:00 AM) [More City Than Water] is beautiful, moving, and, most fundamentally, provocative--a collective portrait of a city defined for good and ill by its relationship to water.-- ""Alta Journal"" (6/20/2022 12:00:00 AM)" Author InformationLacy M. Johnson is the author of the essay collection The Reckonings and the memoirs The Other Side and Trespasses. Her writing has appeared in The Best American Essays, The Best American Travel Writing, the New Yorker, and elsewhere. She teaches creative nonfiction at Rice University and is the founding director of the Houston Flood Museum. Cheryl Beckett is an associate professor and area coordinator at the Kathryn G. McGovern College of the Arts, University of Houston School of Art, Graphic Design Program. Beckett has served as the creative director at Minor Design in Houston since 1987. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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