• Preliminary Tidal Zoning for Houston/Galveston Harbors, TX
    National Oceanic And Atmospheric Administration, "Preliminary Tidal Zoning for Houston/Galveston Harbors, TX," (2001)
  • Buffalo Bayou Park, October 7, 2017
    Buffalo Bayou Park, October 7, 2017
  • Cars by Buffalo Bayou, Houston, TX in 1936
    Schlueter, Frank J. "Cars by Buffalo Bayou." (1935) Museum of Houston and the Houston Metropolitan Research Center
  • Buffalo Bayou Park, October 7, 2017
    Buffalo Bayou Park, October 7, 2017
  • Downtown Green Loop, Plan Downtown
    "Downtown Green Loop," Plan Downtown. (2017) Houston Downtown Management District and Central Houston Inc.
  • Main Street viaduct, Houston, TX in 1910
    "Main Street viaduct." (1910) Museum of Houston and the Houston Metropolitan Research Center
  • Port of Houston Industrial District map showing proposed improvements to Green's Bayou for navigation, 1945
    Port of Houston Authority. "Port of Houston Industrial District map showing proposed improvements to Green's Bayou for navigation." (1945) Woodson Research Center, Rice University
  • Photograph of Buffalo Bayou looking east from Preston Street Bridge, Houston, TX in 1936
    "Photograph of Buffalo Bayou looking east from Preston Street Bridge." (1936) Buffalo Bayou Property Owners Association
  • Harris County topographic watershed map of a preliminary drainage study for Harris County Flood Control, 1940
    Rafferty, J. H.. "Harris County topographic watershed map of a preliminary drainage study for Harris County Flood Control." (1940) Woodson Research Center, Rice University

No other city, of similar size and scale, faces the kind of aqueous environmental threat that Houston has experienced as recently as September 2019 with Tropical Storm Imelda and as memorably as August 2017 with Hurricane Harvey. The environmental threat has only dramatically increased with the ongoing SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, and today, we face a critical moment in the history of this city, when flood control and public health infrastructures are either near catastrophic failure or are leaving swaths of the population unprotected. When the response to catastrophic flooding is not all that well articulated two years after the most severe tropical cyclone rainfall event in the history of the United States, we in the humanities must ask ourselves how our skills and expertise can intervene. Similarly, the humanities can reveal aspects of racial and socioeconomic inequities in access to healthcare and resources, as well as mortality rates during pandemics. What stories. therefore, can the humanities help remember, learn, invent, and tell? What ethics are involved in the weathering of such events? What happens to those who are displaced by flooding or confinement? How are archives and collections recuperated when damaged by water, and by whom? Are urban areas aware of their flooding and toxic histories? Can we imagine and document possible futures? Diluvial Houston: Rescued Histories, Engaged Humanities, and Imagined Futures proposes a new model for engaged humanities research and pedagogy focused on local partnerships that addresses the specific challenges Houston faces in times of environmental disaster.

This initiative is funded by theĀ Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.