Introduction
Gregory V. Button and Mark Schuller
Chapter 1. A Poison Runs Through It: The Elk
River Chemical Spill in West Virginia
Gregory V. Button and Erin R. Eldridge
Chapter 2. Whethering the Storm: The Twin
Natures of Typhoons Haiyan and Yolanda
Greg Bankoff and George Emmanuel Borrinaga
Chapter 3. “The Tremors Felt Round the World”:
Haiti’s Earthquake as Global Imagined Community
Mark Schuller
Chapter 4. Contested Narratives: Challenging
the State’s Neoliberal Authority in the Aftermath of the Chilean
Earthquake
Nia Parson
Chapter 5. Decentralizing Disasters: Civic
Engagement and Stalled Reconstruction after Japan’s 3/11
Bridget Love
Chapter 6. Expert Knowledge and the Ethnography
of Disaster Reconstruction
Roberto E. Barrios
Chapter 7. “We Are Always Getting Ready”: How
Diverse Notions of Time and Flexibility Build Adaptive Capacity in
Alaska and Tuvalu
Elizabeth Marino and Heather Lazrus
Chapter 8. Tempests, Green Teas, and the Right
to Relocate: The Political Ecology of Superstorm Sandy
Melissa Checker
Bibliography
Index
Gregory V. Button is an internationally recognized disaster researcher and a former faculty member at the University of Michigan’s School of Public Health, as well as a former faculty member of the Department of Anthropology at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, where he was Co-Director of the Disasters, Displacement and Human Rights. A Former U.S Senate Congressional Fellow he has published dozens of scholarly articles and book chapters. His work has been featured in many major media outlets. He is a regular contributor to public radio stations and a frequent writer for Counterpunch.
“Contextualizing Disaster, edited by Gregory V. Button and Mark Schuller, makes a significant contribution to a better understanding of the social construction of disasters by contextualizing them in novel and diverse ways… The eight book chapters offer new and innovative analysis of recent disasters that to varying degrees are all translocal, and each chapter is carried by its own “narrative.”… The book is providing fresh impetus not only for disaster scholars but also for DRR institutions and media.” • Anthropos “This book presents a vivid picture of extreme events and how different parties involved in the recovery process contextualize them.” • Arthur D. Murphy, University of North Carolina at Greensboro “This book will be read and read again. I intend to use it in my course, 'Disaster, Self, and Society,' and I suspect others, both sociologists and anthropologists, will assign it to their respective classes. Moreover, it will be read by scholars, enriching their understanding of mayhem. Well done.” • Steve Kroll-Smith, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
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