Public Catastrophes, Private Losses
Sarah Tobias editor Arlene Stein editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Rutgers University Press
Publishing:14th Jan '25
£23.99
This title is due to be published on 14th January, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
From COVID to climate-change-induced wildfires and hurricanes, we live in an era when catastrophes have become the new normal. But even though these events affect us all, some members of society are more vulnerable to harm than others.
This essay collection explores how the definition of catastrophe might be expanded to include many forms of large-scale structural violence on communities, species, and ecosystems. Using feminist methodologies, the contributors to Public Catastrophes, Private Losses trace the connections between seemingly unrelated forms of violence such as structural racism, environmental degradation, and public health crises. In contrast to a news media that focuses on mass fatalities and immediate consequences, these essays call our attention to how catastrophes can also involve slow violence with long-term effects.
The authors also consider how these catastrophes are profoundly shaped by government action or inaction, offering a powerful critique of how government neglect has cost lives and demonstrating how vulnerable populations can be better protected. The essays in this collection examine how public catastrophes imprint themselves on lives, as individuals and communities narrate, process, and grapple with legacies of loss. The book is thus a feminist intervention that challenges the binary between public and private, personal and political.
"Redefining catastrophe not as an unforeseeable or finite event but as a perpetual unfolding of structural violence and its many afterlives, this collection of essays crackles with fury and possibility. Through their varied experiences and perspectives of loss, the authors allow us to see and feel what is missing from official archives, reminding us that grieving is an act of resistance as much as it is an act of love." -- Grace M. Cho * author of Tastes Like War: A Memoir *
"Public Catastrophes, Private Losses helps us understand structural injustice better by showing its common force behind seemingly different kinds of catastrophes. The structural injustices, histories, and dynamics that are behind what come to public awareness through catastrophes are in fact part of the lived experiences of those who suffer the most acute losses. Several contributions are collaborations between activist and academic that illustrate the importance of activism to academic insight and the academic insight embedded in movement activism." -- Brooke A. Ackerly * author of Just Responsibility: A Human Rights Theory of Global Justice *
ISBN: 9781978838758
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 454g
186 pages