Robert M. Rouphail is an assistant professor of history at the University of Iowa. He specializes in the history of modern East Africa and the Indian Ocean world.
""Much more than an environmental and disaster history of an Indian Ocean island-nation, in this closely argued multiscalar study Robert M. Rouphail draws upon a wide range of rich documentation to complicate our understanding of how the lasting impact of cyclones has shaped the identity of modern Mauritians."" - Edward A. Alpers, author of The Indian Ocean in World History ""Cyclones are not merely meteorological events or natural disasters in Mauritius. In this robustly argued and lucidly written book, Robert M. Rouphail shows us that cyclones are enduring conceptual categories that shaped Mauritian identities and social fabric, becoming constitutive of the history of an Indian Ocean society. Cyclonic Lives recalibrates debates within environmental history and disaster studies and will be indispensable reading for anyone concerned with the history of climate crisis."" - Debjani Bhattacharyya, author of Empire and Ecology in the Bengal Delta: The Making of Calcutta ""In Mauritian collective memory, the cyclone is feared for the devastation it causes. Robert M. Rouphail has grasped the essence of the various ways that cyclones impacted Mauritius. And the aftermath: policies that impacted family life, gender roles, housing, moral values and ethnicity."" - Vijaya Teelock, author of Mauritian History: From Its Beginnings to Modern Times