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Bienville's Dilemma

by Richard Campanella
Starting in 1699, a teenaged French Canadian named Jean Baptiste Le Moyne, sieur de Bienville grappled with a high-stakes dilemma: where should the primary city for the new French colony of Louisiana be located? Bienville eventually selected, in 1718, a swampy crescent of alluvium nestled between a flood-prone river and a storm-prone tidal lagoon.
Over the next three centuries, that city, New Orleans, would struggle through countless challenges to become the largest city in the South and among the most important in the nation. It remains today a beacon of urban and cultural distinction, and a prophetic city for a troubled world to watch. All New Orleans’ glories, tragedies, contributions, and complexities can be traced back to the geographical dilemma Bienville confronted in 1718.
Bienville’s Dilemma presents sixty-eight articles on the historical geography of New Orleans, covering the formation and foundation of the city, its urbanization and population, its “humanization” into a place of distinction, the manipulation of its environment, its devastation by Hurricane Katrina, and its ongoing recovery.
 
Richard Campanella, a geographer at Tulane University, is the author of Geographies of New Orleans: Urban Fabrics Before the Storm (Center for Louisiana Studies, 2006), winner of the Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities’ “Book of the Year” Award; Time and Place in New Orleans (2002), selected as the Gulf South Booksellers Association’s “Book of the Year;” and the critically acclaimed photographic survey New Orleans Then and Now (1999). His research has been published in the Journal of American History, Journal of Architectural Education, Technology in Society, and Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing, and cited by the New York Times, National Public Radio, and American Experience (PBS). Originally from Brooklyn, New York, Campanella is the associate director of the Center for Bioenvironmental Research and a research professor with Tulane’s Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences. He and his wife Marina live in the New Orleans neighborhood known by some as “Bywater,” and others as the “Upper Ninth Ward.”
 
RELEASE DATE: November 4, 2008
 
 
 
 
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Document last revised Friday, October 24, 2008 4:25 PM

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