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Appalachian Flooding Short Films

Wednesday, November 15, 2023 @ 7PM (EST)
Screened online
Check out our Digital Handbill!
Marion Abrams (2012, U.S., 57 min.) + post-film discussion

This summer Vermont faced unprecedented flooding–two months’ worth of rain fell in the space of two days in places, flooding Montpelier and other communities. But this flooding wasn’t unprecedented–just 12 years ago Hurricane Irene similarly dumped “unprecedented” amounts of water on the state that had never been seen before. That’s the problem with climate change–all the precedents for what we think are “normal” and “abnormal” are changing. And in Vermont and other Appalachian states, one of the biggest precedents being overturned by climate change will be flooding.

So how should we respond? In the long term, it will require major adaptations for infrastructure and community planning to minimize the devastation of future flooding. But in the short term, we should remember that we can survive this–indeed, amazingly these disasters can even remind us of our better selves, as communities come together and find “a paradise built in hell,” to borrow Rebecca Solnit’s phrase. That’s what we witness in Marion Abrams’ Flood Bound, a first-person narrative told by the residents of Pittsfield, Vermont as they recount how everyone pitched in during the aftermath of Hurricane Irene, when the town was cut off from the outside world. Neighbors rescued neighbors. Strangers donated food. People volunteered however they could–offering schooling, rides, cell service, whatever anyone needed. In the process, old grudges disappeared and new friendships were kindled–the community emerged stronger than before. A true reminder that our anxiety in disasters can be conquered by productive collective action.

(Shown in partnership with the Penn State Water Council)

Following the film, a post-film discussion panel was held with:
  • Andrew Warner (Moderator): Director of Penn State’s Water Initiative/Council in the Institutes of Energy and the Environment at Penn State
  • Dr. Kristina Brant: Assistant Professor of Rural Sociology at Penn State
  • Dr. Andrew L’Roe: Planner for Addison County Regional Planning Commission and volunteer for the Middlebury Fire Department and municipal Conservation Commission
  • Dr. Robert Nicholas: Director of the Center for Climate Risk Management (CLIMA), Associate Research Professor in the Department of Meteorology & Atmospheric Science, and Assistant Director and Associate Research Professor at the Earth & Environmental Systems Institute (EESI) at Penn State

[Abrams’] camera offers revealing glimpses of a community severed from the outside world. In interviews, Pittsfielders recall letting go of grudges and getting hugs from strangers as they pulled together to repair the damage and endure. Call it a reverse Lord of the Flies.

Margot Harrison

Seven Days