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Katrina And The Collapse Of Civil Society In New Orleans
Oleh:
Denzin, Norman K.
Jenis:
Article from Journal - e-Journal
Dalam koleksi:
Cultural Studies <=> Critical Methodologies vol. 7 no. 2 (May 2007)
,
page 145-153.
Fulltext:
145.pdf
(87.07KB)
Isi artikel
America’s collective relationship to itself, to the Bush Administration, and to the world once again changed as a result of the events following Hurricane Katrina.1 Like the destructive effects of the Bush Administration on the American social structure since September 11, 2001, the effects of Katrina have not been immediately visible. “The disaster was incremental rather than cataclysmic” (Johnson, 2005a, p. 25). Instead of a single, epiphanic moment, the effects unfolded in an infinite series of events, memories, the blur of crisis, the last words of a loved one, how President Bush looked looking down on the submerged city out of the window from Air Force One, “every portrait of the storm is different, like a jigsaw puzzle in which no two pieces are alike”
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