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Rurality Re-imagined: Villagers, Farmers, Wanderers and Wild Things [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x203 mm, 200 colour
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Jul-2018
  • Kirjastus: Oro Editions
  • ISBN-10: 1940743346
  • ISBN-13: 9781940743349
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x203 mm, 200 colour
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Jul-2018
  • Kirjastus: Oro Editions
  • ISBN-10: 1940743346
  • ISBN-13: 9781940743349
Against a backdrop of rapid urbanization, representations of rural society and experience are re-thought and re-imagined in this book by leading contemporary artists and scholars.

Rurality Re-imagined is divided into four loose themed sections: villagers, farmers, wanderers, and wild things; each comprises five or six diverse chapters of varied length. In the section on villagers, rural communities are considered as assemblages and spaces of vernacularity, as dark settings for TV dramas, new wave photography, and as sites for community arts projects. The farmer’s section critically re-invigorates the historical fascination with peasantry and farming in the arts through essays, painting, and photography that collectively place the agency of the artist under as much scrutiny as images of agricultural space and people. Stereotypically, the word ‘wanderers’ conjures images of gypsy caravans, or country ramblers, but in this section the term is stretched to include not only the traditional migrations of reindeer herds, but also that of the motorway driver, and migrations of cultural forms too, such as that of hip hop from the clubs of New York to the fields of rural Devon. In the essays and images in the wild things section, wilderness emerges as a highly contested cultural terrain far from any state of purity as it manifests itself in the behaviors of people, flora, and fauna in cultivated and uncultivated landscapes and parks.

Arvustused

"This sparkling collection of essays, photographs, artwork, creative writing and meditations represents a sustained exploration of and contribution to cultures of the countryside and the liminal spaces of the non-urban. Through it we see the contemporary rural in cultural glimpses and social practices, as we seek to make sense of our desire to escape to or from its diminishing scope. It will be of fascination to today's pastoralists and re-wilders, but it should absolutely be read too by cool artists of the city, urban designers and policy-makers alike, indeed by anyone curious about life and culture in 21st-century landscapes."--George McKay "The writers, designers and artists assembled in Rurality Re-imagined ask us to take seriously the neglected countryside, but not to simply assume that neglect and re-present familiar ideas and ideals of the rural as local in opposition to the urban as global. Through collectively reflecting on their own imaginings, experiences and thinking about rurality, and with a suitably diverse set of case studies, the contributors truly open up rural space for readers. The book's four-fold structure takes us from rural communities and farming practices to rural mobilities and the contested 'wildness' of the countryside. Individual chapters read TV drama, rural tradition, haystacks, hip hop, Leylandii and cruising - and much more besides. Rurality Re-imagined challenges all of us in the 'space design disciplines' (and those beyond, too) to look anew at the rural as a spatial and cultural category, as a representational repertoire, and as lived experience. It is a landmark publication in an emerging 'new rural studies' no longer either romanticized as idyll or written off as backwater, the rural here truly is reimagined in the age of the global village."--David Bell

Introduction: Never Mind the Countryside 4(10)
Ben Stringer
VILLAGERS
Re-imagining the Global Village
14(10)
Michael Woods
Balance of the Island
24(10)
Julie Crawshaw
Performing the Village: The Performance of Tradition in the Photography of Anna Fox
34(12)
Rosemary Shirley
Anna Fox
Re-imagining Vernacularity
46(10)
Marcel Vellinga
Frescoed Comics
56(6)
Sara Serrao
Villages Gone Wild: Death by Rural Idyll in The Casual Vacancy and Glue
62(14)
Esther Peeren
FARMERS
Re-imagining Peasant Painting
76(14)
Sigrid Holmwood
After Baruchello: Agricultural Encounters in Contemporary Art
90(12)
Wood Roberdeau
Kosova Haystacks: An interview with Lata Meredith-Vula
102(14)
Ben Stringer
Lala Meredith-Vula
Toward a Museum of Contemporary Farming
116(4)
Kate Genever
Going Underground: SPUD - A Potato Practice Comics
120(14)
Deirdre O'Mahony
Salted Earth: Salt-Making as a Poetics of Mobility and Place
134(14)
Katy Beinart
WANDERERS
When the Migratory Route is Home
148(12)
Kjerstin Uhre
Race, Nationalism, and Landscape Belonging: Stonehenge on the Summer Solstice
160(12)
Ben Pitcher
Tunnelling between Landscape and Artefact: An Itinerary of Points and Vectors
172(14)
Rupert Griffiths
Lia Wei
Soft Tension: Reimagining Urbanism and Rurality through the Spatio-Cultural Practices of Hip Hop
186(8)
Adam de Poor-Evans
Heathrow: Wilderness and Walking
194(6)
Kate Corder
Memories of a Journey at Night
200(6)
Jonathan Mosley
Sophie Warren
WILD THINGS
Re-wilding the Ruins: Landscaping Post-Industrial Sites in the Ruhr
206(12)
Malcolm Miles
Leylandii: Dismantling Suburban Boundaries
218(12)
Jane McAllister
Wild Nights: Cruising and Landscape Management on West Heath
230(8)
Jessica J. Lee
Balsam Bashing
238(6)
Christine Mackey
Architecture of the Rural Gaze
244(12)
John Brennan
Unscoping Animals
256(14)
Rosemarie McGoldrick
CONTRIBUTORS
Author Biographies 270
Ben Stringer teaches architectural design, history and theory at the University of Westminster, London, where he leads a Masters design studio. He is also a trustee of the Oxford City Farm.