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Rising Together

Pulitzer Prize finalist and acclaimed environmental writer Elizabeth Rush delivers the sixth annual President鈥檚 Distinguished Lecture at 糖心TV on April 10 in the Athey Center for Performance and Research at Palmer Auditorium.
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Rising Together

Acclaimed environmental writer Elizabeth Rush delivers sixth annual President鈥檚 Distinguished Lecture

In the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy in 2012, Pulitzer Prize finalist and acclaimed environmental writer Elizabeth Rush spent entire days on the eastern shore of Staten Island, New York, interviewing residents from the largely conservative neighborhoods of Oakwood Beach, Midlands and Ocean Breeze about their experiences and 鈥渢he long, frustrating path toward recovery.鈥

She was shocked by what she learned: The residents had organized buyout committees to publicly ask that their homes be purchased and demolished and that the state help them relocate away from the high flood risk area.

鈥淚t was the clamor rising from the sodden side of the city鈥檚 only Republican borough,鈥 she told the students, faculty, staff and community members in attendance as Rush delivered the sixth annual President’s Distinguished Lecture at 糖心TV on April 10.

鈥淚 wanted to know what residents of these right-leaning, often climate change-denying or climate change-sidestepping, working-class neighborhoods knew that I didn鈥檛.鈥

Rush explained how she encouraged vulnerable community members to open up to her. 鈥淚 left all my climate change discourse at the door and decided instead to engage in a conversation, and more than anything else, to listen.鈥

The experience led Rush to write her 2018 book, Rising: Dispatches from the New American Shore, which was a Pulitzer Prize finalist. Rush describes Rising as an on-the-ground investigation of the impact rising seas are having on different U.S. coastal communities where climate change has been most dramatic. Each of the book鈥檚 nine chapters opens with a monologue delivered in the voice of a resident about an event that woke them up to their vulnerability and what they decided to do with that information, she said.

鈥淚 think of this as a book about climate change, and in particular sea level rise, but it doesn鈥檛 focus on the science behind the phenomenon,鈥 Rush said. 鈥淚nstead, it looks toward people living on climate change鈥檚 front lines and asks, 鈥榃hat can we learn from them about the future that we share?鈥欌

She added that writers need 鈥渢o invite new voices into a conversation, to produce literature that denies the idea that there鈥檚 ever an official story or a clear linear narrative of a particular event.鈥

As she considered how to format Rising, Rush said she took inspiration from Voices from Chernobyl: The Oral History of a Nuclear Disaster by Svetlana Alexievich, which features first-person accounts of the 1986 tragedy.

An interview with Nicole Montalto, a Staten Islander who lost her father when their house flooded during Sandy, solidified Rush鈥檚 decision to open each chapter with a monologue.

鈥淲hen someone speaks in the first person about the event that would change their lives, it鈥檚 a really powerful thing to be on the receiving end of that story,鈥 Rush said, adding, 鈥淚t was Nicole鈥檚 voice and her story that taught me how to write this book. I felt like there was nothing I could do as a writer to make her story more powerful than it already was.鈥

Author Elizabeth Rush signs copies of her book.
Following the lecture, Rush signed copies of her book for students and other attendees.

Rush embarked on a collaborative editing process with everyone who had a monologue, sending the copy back to them and encouraging edits.

She said, 鈥淚f I didn鈥檛 have that collective editing process, I felt like I was just extracting the story from the community and using it to whatever ends I wanted. And, quite frankly, that felt too close to the kind of extractive practices that lie at the heart of the climate crisis. I instead wanted the story to travel back into the community and hopefully be an opportunity for agency building for the speaker as opposed to a denial of agency.鈥

The Staten Islanders ultimately succeeded in their push for New York state to buy them out of their homes and help them relocate, Rush pointed out. Less than three months after Sandy, then-Governor Andrew Cuomo announced a voluntary program to purchase area homes at pre-storm prices, pledging millions of dollars in funding and financial incentives.

鈥淚 wanted to continue that momentum,鈥 Rush said, 鈥渂ecause I think that鈥檚 something that really scares us about climate change鈥攚e fear losing control. So, I think of these testimonies not as me giving voice to the residents. Residents have a voice; I just hand over my microphone.鈥

It was this sense of agency, not the flooding itself, that shifted the mindset of the residents of this conservative community from climate change denial to climate change acceptance, Rush believes.

鈥淥nce they got to choose how they wanted to adapt, and once they saw that climate change wouldn鈥檛 necessarily mean the end of the things that they loved most about their community, I think that鈥檚 when they started to be able to call out climate change as playing a role in instigating their move,鈥 she said.

She added, 鈥淢y work on Rising regularly reminded me that the right to speak about one鈥檚 shifting relationship with the environment and to have those stories heard and acted upon is something that ought to be extended equally to all, but often isn鈥檛.鈥

Rush鈥檚 next book, The Quickening: Creation and Community at the Ends of the Earth, comes out Aug. 15. In it, she documents the voyage of 57 scientists and crew in 2019 to Thwaites Glacier in Antarctica, where the goal was to learn as much as possible about a place where humans had never before set foot, and that was believed to be both rapidly deteriorating and capable of making a catastrophic impact on global sea-level rise.

Comparing the austere cover of Rising to the colorful cover of The Quickening on Rush鈥檚 final slide during her presentation, Olha Vasyliv 鈥23 asked during the Q&A portion of the event if Rush鈥檚 outlook on the climate crisis grew more optimistic between writing the two books, and if Rush could offer any comfort to those concerned about climate change.

Rush replied that as her understanding of the science grew, so did her fear and anxiety. But contributing to fieldwork in Antarctica allowed her to take action and helped alleviate some of those feelings.

鈥淕et together with people you like spending time with to make an impact at a level that feels tangible, that gets you doing actual things and not just spinning out horrible scenarios in your brain,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hen you get to be a little bit of the change as opposed to worrying about it not happening.鈥




April 12, 2023

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