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NEW ORLEANS - HURRICANE KATRINA STORIES
In Their Own Words: New Orleans residents and tourists tell of
their experiences in the days after hurricane Katrina struck. Hear their
stories as recorded by Ira Glass, on his weekly radio program "This
American Life".
Note, if you don't have Real Player, you can click here for a free download:
The New Orleans of Possibility
WWOZ - All Things Considered - 11/8/05)
By Michael Sartisky, Ph.D.
In the face of growing expressions of reluctance from some quarters
nationally to restoring New Orleans, let it be understood that as New
Orleans goes, so shall go the cultural soul of America. For just as surely
as New Orleans was overrun by a storm surge because her buffering coastal
wetlands had been allowed to erode through years of neglect, so too will
American culture sink into terminal banality and homogeneity if it
abandons the root city of American culture. I do not assert this out of a
simple parochial chauvinism, as if we are deaf and blind to the rich
cultures which abound throughout this land, but as a challenge to the
nation.s character to help New Orleans make itself whole having been so
sorely wounded.
Supping on the Open Oyster of New Orleans
Culturally
speaking, today New Orleans stands virtually alone as the most genuine,
vibrant and unique of all American cities. In a Wal-Mart nation, it is the
French market, coffee shop, snowball stand, po-boy shop, Lucky-Dog cart,
mule-driven taffy wagon, and most of all, the local club and dance hall.
With our unique and unprecedented ménge of peoples of many nations,
ethnicities, religions, and hues we foreshadowed America.s own polyglot
evolution as a nation: French colonists and refugees from San Domingue;
Acadians cast into diaspora by the British; Spanish administrators and
soldiers; enslaved Africans and gens de couleur libre; indigenous tribes
such as the Houma, Tunica, and Coushatta; Sephardic Jews; Sicilian and
Lebanese vendors; and Irish laborers put to digging drainage canals in
pestilential swamps because they were more expendable than slaves as they
had no capital value. We were both multicultural and culturally
sophisticated,--with offerings from French opera and chamber groups to
masked balls and bordellos rocking with barrelhouse pianos and
ragtime--before most American cities were a gleam in a speculator.s eye,
before they were a hamlet or a crossroads, before they had a barbershop
quartet.
New Orleans was, is, and will be--even more so if we perish--the shrine
and seedbed of American culture. Our patron saints are Louis Moreau
Gottschalk, Scott Joplin, Buddy Bolden, Jellyroll Morton, Louis Armstrong,
Louis Prima, Fats Domino, Professor Longhair, Dr. John, Irma Thomas, the
Neville Brothers, Ellis and Wynton Marsalis, and Kermit Ruffins. Few
American writers attained any stature who did not sup on the open oyster
of New Orleans, whether Walt Whitman, George Washington Cable, Kate
Chopin, Lafcadio Hearn, O. Henry, Tennessee Williams, Lillian Hellman,
Ernest Gaines, Walker Percy, Anne Rice, Richard Ford, or William Faulkner.
But do not mistake New Orleans for some antiquarian artifact, no quaint
anachronism frozen in time. New Orleans is a seething pool of assimilation
and syncretism, of reinvention and recreation. It is a negotiation and a
navigation between grace and dysfunction. It is a Creole place where
cultural intermarriage is a badge of honor and affirmation of humanity.
Situated precariously on the edge of the American continent, New Orleans.
marginalization is a special vantage from which to see the mainstream of
American culture, a certain slant of light which sees nuance and
possibility better than normality.
The Danger of Normalcy
The danger we pose to ourselves is
that in our rush for normalcy we achieve it. The adjacent suburbs and even
our Central Business District--which abandoned their historical roots in
flight to modernity- -should stand as fair warning for New Orleanans.
capacity for victimizing themselves. After all, the architecture of our
suburban ring and the canyons of Houstonized high-rises were not forced
upon us by people from New Jersey. New Orleans can be whole only if it
understands and respects its own historical antecedents. What New York
hosts in its plenitude and wealth and Los Angeles postures in
artificiality, New Orleans possesses in fact: the only authentic
indigenous urban culture on the continent, the promiscuous and defining
soul of a nation sorely in need of one.
Michael Sartisky, Ph.D.
President/Executive Director
Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities
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