[As we get
closer to what some
are predicting will be another rough winter, a series AmericanStudying
significant winter events from our history. Leading up to a special weekend
post on Pearl Harbor!]
On two interesting
AmericanStudies contexts for a catastrophic storm.
The
record-breaking early February nor’easter that came to be known as the Blizzard of ’78 was at the time and
remains to this day one of the
most destructive storms in American history. Dropping record snowfalls over
much of the northeast (from New England down to
Atlantic City) over a nearly two-day period, the blizzard shut down
virtually all movement in the affected areas for more than a week, left more
than 50 people dead (including a young child who disappeared in the snow
outside of his Massachusetts home and was not found for three weeks), and
produced nearly $2 billion in damages (adjusted to 2014 levels). The phrase “storm of the century” gets
thrown around carelessly at times, but the uniquely extreme and potent Blizzard
of 78 certainly qualifies for that designation (as, I should make clear, does
the March 1993 tropical storm discussed in that linked article).
There are lots
of specific details and elements to that history that are worth analyzing (such
as its
effects on Revere Beach), but I would also note two broader AmericanStudies
contexts for the storm. For one thing, many more New England-area residents
were affected than might have been because of a widespread
dissatisfaction with weather forecasting in the period; metereologists had
been far off on a number of storm forecasts, and so when the storm did not
materialize by Monday morning many such residents went into work as usual—and
were dangerously trapped, including many fatally
so on the highways, when the storm hit with full force that afternoon. Such
communal historical attitudes are far more difficult to trace, and thus perhaps
to remember, than specific events and moments; but as the Blizzard of 78
illustrates, a general social or cultural attitude or perspective can have a
drastic impact on the way those events play out, and so represents a
challenging but important part of AmericanStudying any particular event.
If an attitude
that affected what took place during the blizzard comprises one important way
to AmericanStudy this historical moment, something that did not take place in
its aftermath comprises another. After the two most destructive storms of the
last decade, Hurricanes
Katrina and Sandy,
we’ve seen prominent
concerts and benefits,
attempts to raise funds and other support for all those individuals, communities,
and regions affected by the storms. To the best of my knowledge, there were no
such public performances after the Blizzard of 78—and while it would be
possible to argue that such benefits simply weren’t on the radar yet at that
time, there would be numerous prominent
concerts and benefits
over the subsequent decade,
so I’m not sure if that historical contrast holds up. But if it doesn’t (and it’s
certainly fair to suggest that 1984’s Band Aid was the
starting point for such benefits), the question would be why there were no such
benefits after the hugely destructive Blizzard of 78. In any case, it’s the
kind of AmericanStudies question that can provocatively connect these different
late 20th and early 21st century moments and storms.
Next
AmericanWinter tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other winter events you’d highlight?
PPS. My colleague Irene Martyniuk rightly points out that there were benefit concerts as early as the Concerts for the People of Kampuchea in 1979:
ReplyDeletehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concerts_for_the_People_of_Kampuchea