authors:
- Solnit, Rebecca
content: 'Do people in disasters generally revert to a Hobbesian state, attacking
  each other, fighting for resources to survive? Or do they start helping each other,
  sharing and caring? Rebecca Solnit documents in a journalistic fashion what happened
  after disasters such as the earthquake in San Francisco 1906, the earthquake in
  Mexico City 1985, the terrorist attack destroying the Twin Towers in New York 2001,
  the hurricane Katrina inundating New Orleans 2005, and several others.


  Talking to many people involved in these events, she reports that the dominant reaction
  was to help each other out. The Hobbesian idea that people turn violent in such
  conditions is simply not borne out. In fact, more often than not, people came together
  to form impromptu organizations to help each other and others. And many say afterwards
  that these disasters brought out the best in them, and that their efforts were intensely
  meaningful and gratifying.


  The problem with Solnit''s text is that it is messy, especially the first third.
  It''s eminently readable, that is not the problem. She mixes commentary, analysis
  and conclusions with here description of events in a way that makes it clear that
  she has a very definite approach, and that she wishes to make a point. I do not
  really have a problem with her making points, but I do have the nagging worry that
  her zeal makes her description of events skewed. Does she skip over those events
  that do not fit her ideas? This concern of mine pulls down my rating of the book.


  Her critique of the Hobbesian view is explicit; she thinks it is downright false.
  The cases where violence occurred she attributes to so-called "elite panic", where
  authorities (military, police) in acted as if the stricken public were its enemies.
  She exemplifies with the killing of so-called looters, which most often were people
  simply trying to find food, water and materials to make shelter. But Solnit also
  reports on the white vigilantes in New Orleans who likely killed many black people
  when they were simply trying to pass through the "wrong" neighborhood. Now, to me
  this sounds like Hobbes. But Solnit does not make that connection.


  Solnit views this pattern of helping each other in times of crisis as a glimpse
  of what society could be. She views current everyday life as a low-key permanent
  disaster, a kind of wet blanket smothering us, which is ripped away when a natural
  disaster strikes. In such circumstances we become who we really are; social, caring,
  egalitarian. In her analysis she refers to anarchist political philosophy, but her
  discussion does not go very deep. In particular, she does not try to answer the
  question why these spontaneous self-help and altruistic societies revert back to
  "normal life". Why are they not sustainable? Simply saying that this is the elite
  in action does not really answer the question: Why and how are these elites able
  to reassert their power?


  Thus, her analysis is shallow. It basically just says that these societies are inspirations
  for another way of life. That is not enough. Although reading her book is worth
  while, it is also ultimately unsatisfying.'
date: '2021-12-31'
edition:
  published: '2010'
  publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics)
goodreads: '7970496'
html: '<p>Do people in disasters generally revert to a Hobbesian state, attacking
  each other, fighting for resources to survive? Or do they start helping each other,
  sharing and caring? Rebecca Solnit documents in a journalistic fashion what happened
  after disasters such as the earthquake in San Francisco 1906, the earthquake in
  Mexico City 1985, the terrorist attack destroying the Twin Towers in New York 2001,
  the hurricane Katrina inundating New Orleans 2005, and several others.</p>

  <p>Talking to many people involved in these events, she reports that the dominant
  reaction was to help each other out. The Hobbesian idea that people turn violent
  in such conditions is simply not borne out. In fact, more often than not, people
  came together to form impromptu organizations to help each other and others. And
  many say afterwards that these disasters brought out the best in them, and that
  their efforts were intensely meaningful and gratifying.</p>

  <p>The problem with Solnit''s text is that it is messy, especially the first third.
  It''s eminently readable, that is not the problem. She mixes commentary, analysis
  and conclusions with here description of events in a way that makes it clear that
  she has a very definite approach, and that she wishes to make a point. I do not
  really have a problem with her making points, but I do have the nagging worry that
  her zeal makes her description of events skewed. Does she skip over those events
  that do not fit her ideas? This concern of mine pulls down my rating of the book.</p>

  <p>Her critique of the Hobbesian view is explicit; she thinks it is downright false.
  The cases where violence occurred she attributes to so-called &quot;elite panic&quot;,
  where authorities (military, police) in acted as if the stricken public were its
  enemies. She exemplifies with the killing of so-called looters, which most often
  were people simply trying to find food, water and materials to make shelter. But
  Solnit also reports on the white vigilantes in New Orleans who likely killed many
  black people when they were simply trying to pass through the &quot;wrong&quot;
  neighborhood. Now, to me this sounds like Hobbes. But Solnit does not make that
  connection.</p>

  <p>Solnit views this pattern of helping each other in times of crisis as a glimpse
  of what society could be. She views current everyday life as a low-key permanent
  disaster, a kind of wet blanket smothering us, which is ripped away when a natural
  disaster strikes. In such circumstances we become who we really are; social, caring,
  egalitarian. In her analysis she refers to anarchist political philosophy, but her
  discussion does not go very deep. In particular, she does not try to answer the
  question why these spontaneous self-help and altruistic societies revert back to
  &quot;normal life&quot;. Why are they not sustainable? Simply saying that this is
  the elite in action does not really answer the question: Why and how are these elites
  able to reassert their power?</p>

  <p>Thus, her analysis is shallow. It basically just says that these societies are
  inspirations for another way of life. That is not enough. Although reading her book
  is worth while, it is also ultimately unsatisfying.</p>

  '
isbn: '9780143118077'
language: en
lastmod: '2021-12-31'
path: /library/solnit-2009.html
published: '2009'
rating: 3
reference: Solnit 2009
reviewed: '2021-12-31'
subjects:
- human-evolution
- morality
title: 'A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities That Arise in Disaster'
type: book
year: 2009