Hello all,
Some of you may be interested in my PhD thesis
"Cornish Mining Landscapes: public perceptions of industrial archaeology in a post-industrial society"
which I recently published online through UCL Discovery
http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1417864/
This is a redacted version (following agreements with my informants, some of whom didn't want their words on the Internet). Full version of the thesis available via UCL library.
The world feels a little lighter now it's out there, usable, and I no longer have to spend time trying to figure out what to do with it ...
Best wishes,
Hilary
Abstract
This thesis considers local residents’ perceptions of Cornish mining landscape, with a particular focus on tin and copper mining. The aim of the thesis is to understand the changing values associated with Cornish mining landscape throughout the post-war period (from 1950 to 2010). This research has focused on the familiar and the everyday including industrial remains of the later 20th century. The three case studies examined, Botallack, St Agnes, and Minions, are part of the Cornish Mining Landscape World Heritage Site (designated in 2006). This research has been strongly informed by the social archaeology of industry and contemporary archaeology, and a number of complimentary ethnographic and statistical techniques have been utilised, supplemented by archival research and visual data methods.
The themes that have been examined include: site descriptions; paths and networks; metaphors of industry; significant features in the landscape; time and change; contention in the landscape; and World Heritage Site status. This research has concluded that public perceptions on Cornish mining landscapes are strongly informed by romanticism whilst the use of demonic, heroic and romantic tropes is another key theme. Since mine shafts were closed for health and safety reasons perception is now focused on the surface of mines and the subsurface world is largely out-of-sight and out of mind. Changes in the landscape are often defined around concepts of the ‘local’, the ‘incomer’ and the ‘outsider’; the latter largely standing for external authority. Statistical analysis has shown that longevity of residence is a significant factor in shaping perception, whilst qualitative data has demonstrated different ways in which 'incomers' become ‘local’. There are many different connections to Cornish mining landscape, and these relict industrial sites are not dead or derelict spaces.
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