ABSTRACT

This volume explores how mechanisms of postindustrial capitalism affect places and people in peripheral regions and de-industrializing cities. While studies of globalization tend to emphasize localities newly connected to global systems, this collection, in contrast, analyzes the disconnection of communities away from the market, presenting a range of ethnographic case studies that scrutinize the framework of this transformative process, analyzing new social formations that are emerging in the voids left behind by the de-industrialization, and introducing a discussion on the potential impacts of the current economic and ecological crises on the hyper-mobile model that has characterized this recent phase of global capitalism and spatially uneven development.

chapter |21 pages

The Anthropology of Postindustrialism

Ethnographies of Disconnection

chapter |16 pages

Working in the “Life Market”

Gold, Coffee, and Violence in the Papua New Guinea Highlands

chapter |18 pages

When the Smoke Clears

Seeing Beyond Tobacco and Other Extractive Industries in Rural Appalachian Kentucky

chapter |17 pages

The Afterlife of Northern Development

Ghost Towns in the Russian Far North 1

chapter |19 pages

The Trouble of Connection

E-Waste in China Between State Regulation, Development Regimes, and Global Capitalism 1

chapter |15 pages

A Legacy of Sugar and Slaves

Disconnection and Regionalism in Bahia, Brazil

chapter |19 pages

Abandoned Environments

Producing New Systems of Value Through Urban Exploration

chapter |17 pages

“There Goes the Neighborhood”

Narrating the Decline of Place in East Berlin