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Toxic heritage : legacies, futures, and environmental justice / edited by Elizabeth Kryder-Reid and Sarah May.
Author
Kryder-Reid, Elizabeth
[Browse]
Format
Book
Language
English
Published/Created
2023.
Milton Park, Oxon : Routledge, [2024]
©2024
Description
1 online resource (385 pages)
Availability
Available Online
Taylor & Francis eBooks Open Access
Taylor & Francis eBooks Complete
OAPEN
DOAB Directory of Open Access Books
Details
Subject(s)
Cultural property
[Browse]
Editor
Kryder-Reid, Elizabeth
[Browse]
May, Sarah (Archaeologist)
[Browse]
Series
Key issues in cultural heritage.
[More in this series]
Summary note
"Toxic Heritage addresses the heritage value of contamination and toxic sites and provides the first in-depth examination of toxic heritage as a global issue. Bringing together case studies, visual essays and substantive chapters written by leading scholars from around the world, the volume provides a critical framing of the globally expanding field of toxic heritage. Authors from a variety of disciplinary perspectives and methodologies examine toxic heritage as both a material phenomenon and a concept. Organized in five thematic sections, the book explores the meaning and significance of toxic heritage, politics, narratives, affected communities, and activist approaches and interventions. It identifies critical issues and highlights areas of emerging research on the intersections of environmental harm with formal and informal memory practices, while also highlighting the resilience, advocacy, and creativity of communities, scholars, and heritage professionals in responding to the current environmental crises. Toxic Heritage is useful and relevant to scholars and students working across a range of disciplines, including heritage studies, environmental science, archaeology, anthropology and geography"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliographic references
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Source of description
Description based on print version record.
Contents
Intro
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Contributors
Foreword
References
Series General Co-Editors' Foreword
Toxic Heritage: An Introduction
Premise and Genesis
Themes
Organization and Format
Section 1. Introduction: Framing Toxicity
1. Toxic legacies of slickens in California: a mobile heritage of hydraulic mining debris
Introduction: critical pedagogies of the toxic
Slickens
Making visible
Looking forward
Visual essay 1. Extraction old and new: Toxic legacies of mining the desert in southwestern Africa
Roots and routes of extraction
Ilmenite
Diamonds
Copper
Zinc
Acid and Arsenic
Uranium
Future mining
Acknowledgements
Notes
Bibliography (all URLs last accessed 17 July 2022)
2. Of blaes and bings: the (non)toxic heritage of the West Lothian oil shale industry
Toxic language
Geosocialities
Blaes and bings
Emergence
Transformation
Monumentality
Revaluation
Reimagination
Discussion
Bibliography
3. When Toxic Heritage is Forever: Confronting PFAS Contamination and Toxicity as Lived Experience
Wildest Hellcat
Lost Soles
Black Plumes
Conclusion
4. Plasticity and Time: Using the Stress-Strain Curve as a Framework for Investigating the Wicked Problems of Marine Pollution and Climate Change
Introduction
The 'Wicked Problem' of Plastic Pollution
The Archaeology of Plastics
The Stress-Strain Curve
Section 2. Introduction: The Politics of Toxic Heritage
5. Heritage-led Regeneration and the Sanitisation of Memory in the Lower Swansea Valley
Chronology of post-industrial Swansea
Politics of heritage projects
Heritage, disaster, decontamination.
Case Study 1. Ghost Wrecks of the Anthropocene: An Enduring Toxic Legacy of the Pacific War
6. Military Legacies and Indigenous Heritage in Canada's Newest National Park Reserve
Background
Colonialism and the Military
Note
Works Cited
Case study 2. Trash Fires as Toxic Heritage in Palestine
How can the term "toxic heritage" help us understand trash fires on occupied territory?
7. Politics of Mining: Toxic Heritage in the Atacama Desert
Politics of Toxic Heritage
Toxic Mining Heritages: Between Effects and Affection
Lithium
Conclusions: After Mining?
Case study 3. Sticky, Stinky, Squalid: The Toxic Leachate of Households' Waste in an Area of Urban Decay in Tehran (Iran)
Areas of Urban Decay in a Crowded City: Tehran
Waste Management in Historical Areas of Urban Decay
Sticky, Stinky, and ... Heritage
8. Toxic Landmarking and Technoprecarious Heritage in Ghana
Brief History of the Agbogbloshie Area
Landmarking Agbogbloshie: Remains of Toxic Resettlement
Landmarking Agbogbloshie: Creative Neoliberal Installments
Section 3. Introduction: Affected Communities, Activism, and Agency
9. Reluctant Returns: Repatriating a Poisoned Past
Understanding the Problem: A History of Toxic Treatments
With Dignity and Respect
A Homecoming Deferred
Damned If You Do
Why Did You Give Them Back?
Giving Voice to Bear
Identify and Isolate
A Global Problem
Colonisation's Painful Legacy
Moving Forward: Collaboration is Key
Bibliography.
Case study 4. Public Memory of Toxic Displacement: Heavy Metal Contamination and Superfund Remediation in Federally Assisted Housing Communities
Visual Essay 2. Translating and transforming toxicity: Moving between ethnography and graphic art
10. Preservation by Demolition: Toxic Heritage in Contemporary China
Resistance to relocation
Bargaining with toxic heritage
Preservation by demolition: Destroying and remaking toxic heritage
11. Unwanted Legacy and Memory of the Milieu: Toxic Materials, Remediation, Habituation (Estarreja, Portugal)
Introduction - Damaged World
Between Land and Water, the Place is Magnificent
Among Optimism and Utopia
The Pessimistic View
Unwanted Legacy in Estarreja
A Logical Continuum of Heritage Studies
Toxic Materials
The Materiality of Toxic Substances
Remediation and Memory of the Milieu
Legacy versus Heritage
Recovery of a Contaminated Ditch
A Border Case
Habituation and Activatable Memory
The City's Image
The Worrying Comes from Others
A Kind of Balance
12. Environmental and Embodied Agro-Toxic Heritage in Rural Uruguay: From Recognition to Transition to Sustainability Among Dairy Farmers
Toxic Heritage and the Search for Alternatives to the Conventional Dairy Production Model
Final remarks
Section 4. Introduction: Narratives of Toxic Heritage
13. Dirty Laundry: The Toxic Heritage of Dry Cleaning in Indianapolis, Indiana
A Brief History of Dry Cleaning
Narratives of Dry-Cleaning Heritage in Indianapolis
Activist Voices: Archives, Journalism, and Participatory Heritage
Case study 5. When Cleaning up the Battlefields from When Times of War have Polluted Soils in Times of Peace: A Case Study of a Silent but Visible Toxic Legacy from the Great War
Post-Conflict War Waste
The Case of the Forest of Spincourt
Conclusion. The Silent Legacy of the Great War
14. Toxic City: Industrial Residues, the Body and Community Activism as Heritage Practice in Glasgow
Glasgow: Industrial Legacies, Toxicity and the Limits of Regulation
Chemical Chernobyl": Environmental Injustice, Activism and the Glasgow Chemical Industry
Concluding Thoughts: Narrating, Curating and Memorialising a Toxic City
Case study 6. Rubber as (toxic) heritage: Amazonian Knowledge and the rubber Industry
Introduction to natural rubber
Rubber heritage in the Amazon
Case study 7. Three memory frameworks on Chernobyl
15. The Toxic Anthracite = Toxic Heritage
Nostalgia in a Toxic Environment
Section 5. Introduction: Approaches and Interventions
16. Environmental Justice Tours: Transformative Narratives of Struggle, Solidarity, and Activism
History of Ironbound Community Corporation (ICC) and Ironbound, Newark, NJ
History &
Evolution of EJ Tours at ICC: Building Solidarity and Organizing
Evolution of EJ Tours at ICC: Audiences and Movement Goals
We Speak for Ourselves: Reclaiming Spaces of Resistance and Reconstituting Possibilities
EJ Tours as Movement Tools for Making Demands for Accountability and Action
Conclusion - EJ Tours as Portals to Environmental Justice Futures
Visual Essay 3. Getting the Lead Out, One Community at a Time
References.
Case study 8. Climate Museum UK: Practices in Response to the Traumasphere
17. Toxic Heritage and Reparations: Activating Memory for Environmental and Climate Justice
Climate as a Problem of History and Memory
Applying EJ Principles to Heritage Work: Participatory Public Memory for Climate Justice
Newark
New Orleans
Puerto Rico
Case study 9. From Leftovers To Takeover: Latent Insurgency Amidst The System's Remnants
Visual Essay 4. Taking Care of Nuclear Waste
From existential risk to global climate action
The art of forgetting
Taking a people-centred approach
Uncertainty as an opportunity for care
Toxicity of cultural heritage
18. Toxic and Wasted: Artists Thinking About How to Engage with Material Futures
Planning for Nuclear Waste Repositories: Intended and Unintended Monuments
Art, Waste, and Heritage: Land Art and Industrial Landscapes
Reclaiming Landscape: Indigenous Artists
Remaining Connected: From Marking to Living with Waste
Art and Toxic Memories
Nothing is Wasted
Everything is Toxic
Heritage is Everything
Conclusion: Why toxic heritage matters
Index.
Show 170 more Contents items
ISBN
9781000918014
1000918017
9781003365259
1003365256
9781000917994
1000917991
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