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Featured // Vol. 31, No. 3

Save What You Can

essay by Jessica Dauterive , Mary Niall Mitchell
Editor's Picks
Southern Cultures Cover Katrina's America
Vol. 31, No. 3 Katrina's America
Guest edited by:
Andy Horowitz
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A selection of what our readers love, in all the forms we publish: scholarly articles, memoir, interviews/oral histories, creative nonfiction, photo essays, and shorter features.

A Look at
Our Past

Browse past issues and articles from the last 30 years
Recent Features
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Katrina’s America

by Andy Horowitz
On August 29, 2005, when I was twenty-four and living in Connecticut, I watched the levees surrounding metropolitan New Orleans collapse on television. I called my ex-girlfriend, a fifth-generation New Orleanian who was then living in Lafayette. When she answered the phone, I heard crying in the background. Friends from New Orleans had evacuated to »
beep Poetry

A Mass For Worlds Pre and Post

Preface to a 918 Volume (304 children) Suicide Note or Letter to June Jordan on Jonestown reply written in New Orleans, 1,392, . . . official count

by Kristina Kay Robinson
I. refrain: “And what about that blue house? Are youhiding any souls over there?”-St. Mary and an archangel interrogate the demonrefrain: “goddamn dreamers” –Jim Jones
beep Photography

Artist Spotlight: Right of Return

by Chandra McCormick, Keith Calhoun
Our work centers on everyday people whose lives are rooted in the soil and woven into the fabric of American society. We are drawn to photography for its power to convey stories—how a single image can speak volumes. Through our lens, we spotlight the builders, planters, caretakers, and laborers of the Deep South—those who nurture »
beep Roundtable

Ever Since

A Roundtable

by Southern Cultures
“When people talked about ‘Katrina,'” a New Orleanian told a New Orleans Gambit reporter in 2008, “they are not just talking about the storm anymore. It’s the insurance crisis, the mental health crisis, the crime, the homeless under the bridge—the whole ball of wax.” What is Katrina now? A storm, a flood, or an engineering failure? A »
beep Photo Essay

“I Was a Person Who Was Raised on Love, Not Raised...

by Angelica Robinson
I don’t remember much of how the actual city of New Orleans looked when I was a child, especially my surroundings before Hurricane Katrina. Growing up, my lens of the city was my family’s home in the Ninth Ward. Sometimes it felt like my siblings and I were in our own bubble. We usually just »
beep Art

Sheryl Oring’s “I Wish to Say”

by Corey Dzenko
In 2004, artist Sheryl Oring donned a red, white, and blue outfit of a 1960s-era secretary and first performed her ongoing social practice project I Wish to Say. She asked participants, “If I were the president, what would you wish to say to me?” She typed their responses verbatim with a typewriter onto four-by-six-inch postcards. This »
beep Interview

In the Spirit of Community

The Nanih Bvlbancha Mound

by Tammy Greer, Mariah Hernandez-Fitch
It was a two-hour drive from New Orleans to Hattiesburg, Mississippi, in the sweltering heat of summer 2024, when I first met Dr. Tammy Greer. Just the day before, I had taken an early morning walk to Nanih Bvlbancha at Lafitte Greenway, a project she helped bring to life alongside a collaborative group of artists »
beep Memoir

La Tempesta del Mio Cuore

by Stephen R. Garofano
At the time Hurricane Katrina made landfall, Stephen Garofano was a twenty-eight-year-old professional musician living in New Orleans. He says, “In the aftermath of the storm, my diary began to feel like an important document of the historical tragedy unfolding around me, as well as a tether to reality and a lifeline to myself.” An opera »
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Another Kind of City

by Kalamu ya Salaam, Joshua B. Guild, Andy Horowitz, Kira Akerman, Zac Manuel
Kalamu ya Salaam was born Vallery Ferdinand III in New Orleans in 1947. His extraordinary career establishes him as New Orleans’s most important living writer and intellectual. He spoke recently with Joshua Guild about how Katrina fits into his life and thinking today. Featuring Kalamu ya Salaam, Eric Waters, and Joshua B. Guild.Interview conducted by Joshua »
beep Essay

Know Your CCCs

The Crescent City Connection and the Chinese Cajun Cowboy

by Robin McDowell
On September 1, 2005, three days after Katrina made landfall, a shotgun shell whizzed over the head of a young Black man holding his daughter in his arms. He was among hundreds of victims that day, eager to escape the flood by crossing the Crescent City Connection (CCC), a double span bridge over the Mississippi »
beep Photo Essay

Save What You Can

Tending Katrina’s Community Archive

by Jessica Dauterive , Mary Niall Mitchell
In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, Michael Mizell-Nelson (1965–2014) did what good public historians do: he looked for ways to help the city tell its own story. Mizell-Nelson, on the history faculty at the University of New Orleans, teamed up with colleagues at the Center for History and New Media at George »
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Crafting Black Ecologies

From the Gulf and Its Geographic Kin

by Naya Jones, Tianna Bruno, Morgan P. Vickers, shah noor hussein, Danicia Malone
Introduction: Grounding shah noor: Like seeds braided in cornrows,                                      grains of rice hidden into tendrils,                                     maps stitched in quilts, and                                      braid patterns weaving histories Ayana: There is always tea,something with garciniaand mint,and a little maté—for a kick. These are glimpses of how we craft Black ecologies. In the polyvocal piece that follows, we reflect on Black craft as both a practice and »
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