The Big Thirst chapters 8-10
In Charles Fishman’s book The Big Thirst (2011), Fishman argues that water should be provided in rural areas twenty-four-seven hours a day, seven days a week in pipes that keep it clean and safe. As developed as India is in the technology sector it is not on the water sector. The poor people in India have to pay a daily price for their water that makes them give up education, employment because they have to make lines for hours just to get their water. They do not have easy access to water like Americans do, when they should be provided with a twenty-four-seven hour system as well, which can make a huge difference in their daily lives. Fishman states that water is in fact essentially free and what we pay for simply covers the costs of delivering the water. The belief that there is an abundance of water makes us misuse more because we think it will always be there. So, Fishman argues putting a price on the quantity of water we use would not be a bad idea because the lack of a price on water “leads to all kinds of inequities and inefficiencies”. A price on water will make people value it because the price is to make sure this substance is available in the quantity and quality that sustains the kind of communities we want to live in. Fishman says Americans have to reimagine the idea of “clean water” and stop using water cleaned to drinking- water quality standards for things like flushing the toilet and watering lawns. The concern that Americans have of the quality of tap water should not be one when in fact the United States has among the safest, most closely monitored water systems in the world, but we instead opt for bottled water. Our relationship with water has to change to a positive view because as Americans we’ve become accustomed to the water habits of misusing it. Our behavior towards water has to change which will determine the future of water.
Dichotomy- a separation into two divisions that differ widely from, or contradict each other
Vexation- something that provokes irritability or anxiety Ubiquitous- present everywhere at once, or seeming to be
Cacophonous- sounding loud, jarring, and unpleasant
Desiccates- to remove the moisture from something or become free of moisture Vertiginous- tending to change frequently or suddenly
Leverage- power over other people, especially something that gives an advantage but is not referred to openly Refurbish- restore something to good repair
Anaphora- “We all know what it feels like to be thirsty…We know what a dried-up lawn looks like…we know what a plush, well-watered lawn feels like… We know what water that’s been sitting in the bottom of the canoe…” (312)
Personification- “When you think of the qualities of water that are so appealing—the energy, the playfulness, the adaptability, the variety of mood, the artistry…” (312)
Simile- “I don’t like drinking tap water because I don’t trust tap water”… “It would be like Specter standing up before a group of college students, shrugging, and saying that he avoids bridges because he “doesn’t trust” the bridge building system in the United States, or that he always drives because he “doesn’t trust” U.S. air controllers” (299)
Rhetorical question- “Why wouldn’t we revere water, of all the things we could revere?”(298)
Statistics- “Forty-five percent of Indians do not have routine access to safe drinking water—that’s 540 million people who don’t have reliable water, everyday” (223)
“…39 percent of Indian adults can not read or write, with the burden falling most heavily on women. Fifty-two percent of Indians adult women are illiterate- more than 200 million Indian women who can neither read nor write” (227)
What connection is made through the use of repetition in the final chapters and the beginning chapters?
How does the lack of a twenty-four-seven hour water system affect the life style in rural areas?
Memorable quote:
“That is the first lesson of water poverty -- in rural India, but anywhere else as well. Water poverty doesn’t just mean your hands are dirty, or you can’t wash your clothes, or you are often thirsty. Water poverty may mean you never learn to read, it means you get sick more often than you should, it means you and your children are hungry. Water poverty is, quite literally, de-civilizing” (246).