ABSTRACT

All industrialization is deeply rooted within the specific geographies in which it took place, and echoes of previous industrialization continue to reverberate in these places through to the modern day. This book investigates the overlap of memory and the impacts of industrialization within today’s communities and the senses of place and heritage that grew alongside and in reaction to the growth of mines, mills, and factories. 

The economic and social change that accompanied the unchecked accumulation of wealth and exploitation of labor as the industrial revolution spread throughout the world has numerous lasting impacts on the socioeconomics of today. Likewise, the planet itself is now reeling. The memory and heritage of these processes reach into the communities that owe the industrial revolution their existence, but these populations also often suffered adverse impacts to their health and environment through the large-scale and rapid extraction of natural resources and production of goods. Through the themes of memory, community, and place; working post-industrial landscapes; and the de-romanticization of industrial pasts, this book examines the endurance and decline of these communities, the spatial processes of industrial byproducts, and the memory and heritage of industrialization and its legacies.

While based in the traditions of geography, this collection also draws upon and will be of great interest to students and scholars of cultural anthropology, archaeology, sociology, history, architecture, civil engineering, and heritage, memory, museum, and tourism studies. Using global examples, the authors provide a uniquely geographic understanding to industrial heritage across the spaces, places, and memories of industrial development.

chapter 1|20 pages

Introduction

Geographies of post-industrial memory, place, and heritage

part 1|47 pages

Constructing post-industrial communities

chapter 2|14 pages

Notes from a shrinking market

‘Anticipatory nostalgia’ and place-making in the midst of change

chapter 3|15 pages

Asansol

Unfinished biography of a Raj Era railway town: Explorations in heritage practice in post-India

chapter 4|16 pages

Everyday resonances of industrial pasts

Considering lived and affective memories in ex-coal mining landscapes in a South Wales valley

part 2|70 pages

Post-industrial working landscapes

chapter 6|18 pages

Contamination as artifact

Waste and the presence of absence at the Trout Lake concentrator, Coleraine, Minnesota

chapter 7|20 pages

Geocreativity

Place rooted social engagement in industrial ruins – the case of Konvent, Spain

chapter 8|16 pages

Dramatising deindustrialisation

Experiential authority, temporality and embodiment in a play about nuclear decommissioning

part 3|62 pages

De-romanticizing industrial heritage

chapter 9|17 pages

Agrarian ruins of the Khmer Rouge

The post-industrial landscapes of a rural economy

chapter 11|13 pages

Industrial heritage in an era of climate catastrophe

Contamination as heritage

chapter 12|16 pages

Amgueddfa’r Gogledd

Slate, slavery, and transatlantic labor in the National Slate Museum