2019劳工历史评论论文奖得主:20世纪70年代英国的去工业化:比尔斯顿钢铁厂的关闭与工作、地点和归属的政治1

IF 0.3 3区 历史学 Q4 Arts and Humanities
Matthew Beebee
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文通过对1979年5月关闭的西米德兰兹郡比尔斯顿钢铁厂的案例研究,探讨了20世纪70年代工业衰退对流行的自我和场所建筑的影响。继最近将去工业化探索为一个转型过程,而不仅仅是一个在关闭后做出反应的谨慎事件之后,这篇文章利用当地电视和印刷媒体的当代报道,揭示了去工业化作为一种破坏性力量的直接性。尽管对去工业化的研究长期以来一直将怀旧视为回顾性证词中一种特征性的、定义身份的比喻,但本文所采用的方法表明,对身份的怀旧改造已经是20世纪70年代末比尔斯顿日常语言的一个突出特征。区域经济结构调整的长期进程已经开始重塑当地的个人政治。比尔斯顿钢铁厂是西米德兰兹郡一度占主导地位的钢铁业的最后堡垒,比尔斯顿的钢铁工人将这一特点视为个人和社区层面的独特性和自豪感的标志。钢铁厂关闭的后果是其深远的社会和文化影响,对自我和地方的影响错综复杂。这篇文章认为,社区和归属感的概念并不一定会减弱,而是经过重建和调整,以理解并开始经历工业衰退。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
2019 Labour History Review Essay Prize Winner: Navigating Deindustrialization in 1970s Britain: The Closure of Bilston Steel Works and the Politics of Work, Place, and Belonging1
This article examines the impact of industrial decline on popular constructions of selfhood and place during the 1970s through a case study of the Bilston Steel Works in the West Midlands, which closed in May 1979. Following recent work exploring deindustrialization as a process of transformation, rather than simply a discreet event that is reacted to after the moment of closure, the article makes use of the contemporary accounts of local television and print media to uncover the immediacy of deindustrialization as a disruptive force. While studies of deindustrialization have long identified nostalgia as a characteristic, identity-defining trope of retrospective testimonies, the approach taken in this article suggests that the nostalgic reworking of identity was already a prominent feature of everyday language in late 1970s Bilston. Long-term processes of regional economic restructuring had already begun to recast the personal politics of place. The Bilston Steel Works was the last bastion of the once dominant steel industry in the West Midlands, a feature that Bilston’s steelworkers celebrated as a mark of uniqueness and pride at both an individual and community level. A consequence of the closure of the steelworks was its far-reaching social and cultural impact, with the implications for self and place complexly intertwined. The article argues that notions of community and belonging did not necessarily wane but were rather reconstructed and adapted to make sense of, and begin the process of navigating through, industrial decline.
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CiteScore
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