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Remembering the Future: Natural Disaster, Place, and Symbolic Survival
Author(s) -
Shtob Daniel A.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
rural sociology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.083
H-Index - 65
eISSN - 1549-0831
pISSN - 0036-0112
DOI - 10.1111/ruso.12224
Subject(s) - natural hazard , context (archaeology) , agency (philosophy) , narrative , natural disaster , community resilience , psychological resilience , collective memory , hazard , sociology , natural (archaeology) , environmental ethics , history , geography , resource (disambiguation) , political science , social psychology , social science , psychology , ecology , law , computer network , linguistics , philosophy , meteorology , computer science , biology , archaeology
The Pacific Northwest coast of the United States is currently facing the threat of an earthquake and tsunami some experts predict will be the worst natural disaster in North American history. This region also must contend with predicted effects of climate change. Applying the sociological traditions of memory, silence, and place to the natural hazard context, I qualitatively explore how local residents collectively envision future disasters and their associated risks. Responsive narratives are developed from an array of local meanings and identities drawn from place. They tend to partially displace narratives that visualize disasters as disruptive agents of danger, mnemonically replacing them with symbols of survival, continuity, and community agency. Overall, I find that this collective displacement manifests in event‐ and place‐specific ways and partially silences disturbing aspects of potential disaster. These findings demonstrate the promise of analyzing the idiosyncratic ways that future environmental disaster is perceived and experienced. Because risk perception has been identified as a contributor to community resilience and capacity, these findings emphasize the need for local, place‐based approaches to disaster planning, particularly in small communities with resource‐extractive histories.