Trouble The Water: An Analysis Of Trouble The Water

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Nearly 10 years after hurricane Katrina ravaged through the city of New Orleans and surrounding areas in southern Louisiana, the city is still struggling to recover from the $108 billion caused by damage. Nominated for Academy and Emmy awards, the captivating documentary Trouble The Water analyzes the consequences played both during and following the disastrous events during hurricane Katrina. Such events are displayed using the sociological perspective —the perspective on human behavior and how it connects to society— to understand how poverty, social class, and racial issues are valued in different areas of the United States, especially in these troubled areas. Trouble the Water explores these issues of race, class, and the relationship of …show more content…

The main “conflict”, or revolt, results from this documentary, which aired nationally in major theaters and on TV broadcasts to educate America about what was really happening during Hurricane Katrina as the need for change was made public. With the levee systems failing, flooding 80 percent of New Orleans, to the overwhelming lack of control in relief efforts taken after the storm had passed shows how very little effort was given into the protection of lower class residents. With a death count of over 18,000, the storm that shook the south east coast is considered to be one of the deadliest natural disasters to hit America. Nearing the winter of 2005, hurricane Katrina formed and was announced a category 5 storm, causing the Louisiana coast to be under mandatory evacuation. The biggest city in the runway of the storm, New Orleans, is a city of extreme poverty, with almost half of its people earning incomes below the poverty line, and living in under-developed areas. The poverty rate at the time was 27 percent, causing New Orleans to be the second highest poverty rated city in America. With a population of 484,674 residents at

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