Imagetext and Post-Katrina Disaster Recovery in Sarah M. Broom’s The Yellow House (2019)

Phillip, Cydney. 2025. Imagetext and Post-Katrina Disaster Recovery in Sarah M. Broom’s The Yellow House (2019). Comparative American Studies: An International Journal, ISSN 1477-5700 [Article] (In Press)

[img] Text
Imagetext and Post-Katrina Disaster Recovery in Sarah M. Broom s The Yellow House 2019 .pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.

Download (751kB)

Abstract or Description

This essay attends to the ways in which vernacular photographs modulate into post-Katrina literature. In 2005, when the deluge receded, saltwater-stained snapshots were found to be enmeshed in the debris – a haunting reminder of the mnemonic violence of the storm and its widespread destruction of familial photographic archives. Various volunteer groups and non-profit organisations were therefore setup with the sole objective of restoring flood-damaged photographs and returning them to their original owners. Turning to Sarah M. Broom’s memoir, The Yellow House, this essay engages with the role of the literature in this process and within the ongoing, unresolved context of post-Katrina disaster recovery. In doing so, it reads The Yellow House in relation to W.J.T. Mitchell’s concept of the imagetext, illuminating the visual-verbal entanglements that constellate throughout the memoir, with a particular focus on how language supplement images that were vulnerable to water-mediated erasure. By demonstrating how The Yellow House resists ecologically mediated, racialised violence and its ongoing assault on the Black archive, this article argues that Broom repurposes imagetext as a method for cultivating hope in times of crisis.

Item Type:

Article

Identification Number (DOI):

https://doi.org/10.1080/14775700.2025.2464303

Keywords:

Hurricane Katrina; cultural memory; imagetext; hope; race; disaster recovery; anthropocene; vernacular; photography

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

English and Comparative Literature

Dates:

DateEvent
4 February 2025Accepted
16 February 2025Published Online

Item ID:

38716

Date Deposited:

15 Apr 2025 12:15

Last Modified:

15 Apr 2025 12:15

Peer Reviewed:

Yes, this version has been peer-reviewed.

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/38716

View statistics for this item...

Edit Record Edit Record (login required)