Cover art for Slow Catastrophes
Published
Monash University Publishing, August 2017
ISBN
9781925495430
Format
Softcover, 352 pages
Dimensions
15.3cm × 23.4cm

Slow Catastrophes Living with Drought in Australia

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Living with drought is one of the biggest

issues of our times.

Climate change scenarios suggest that in the next fifty

years global warming will increase both the frequency and severity of these

phenomena. Stories of drought are familiar to us, accompanied by images of dead

sheep, dry dams, cracked earth, farmers leaving their lands, and rural economic

stagnation. Drought is indeed a catastrophe, played out slowly. But as Rebecca

Jones reveals in this sensitive account of families living on the Australian

land, the story of drought in this driest continent is as much about

resilience, adaptation, strength of community, ingenious planning for, and

creative responses to, persistent absences of rainfall.

The histories of eight

farming families, stretching from the 1870s to the 1950s, are related, with a

focus on private lives and inner thoughts, revealed by personal diaries. The story

is brought up to the present with the author's discussions with contemporary

farmers and pastoralists. In greatly enriching our understanding of the human

dimensions of drought, Slow Catastrophes provides us with vital resources to

face our ecological future.

Featured in The Weekly Times here.

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