Heritage, Time, Industrial Change, and Inequality in the Rural British Idyll
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Cambridge
Department Name: Social Anthropology
Abstract
While responding to calls for a foregrounding of political economy and class in the study of culture, I bring together
discussions of time and heritage in my proposal to examine narrative-construction in the face of increasing social
polarisation. I ask: How are experiences of time and projects of heritage shaping narratives of history and place in the
face of industrial change and economic inequality in rural Britain? In my proposed field sites of Newlyn and Mousehole,
Cornwall, the traditional fishing industry has been gradually replaced in economic significance by tourism and the service
sector. Engaging in both an ethnographic and historical investigation, I aim to examine the mechanisms and narratives of
increasing inequality and gentrification in the area. This will entail a study of rural industrial change, rural welfare state
interaction, and the impact of austerity policy and the Covid-19 pandemic in these communities, as well as of
heterogeneous experiences of time and conceptions of place in relation to inequality. I plan on developing a novel, indepth, historical and ethnographic examination of Brexit in British fishing communities, and building an understanding of
how nostalgic sentiment might be actively produced for financial or political ends. I want to explore the capital-driven
development of fishing villages into 'destinations of authenticity' and, through an engagement with local heritage groups,
matters of local politics and identity.
discussions of time and heritage in my proposal to examine narrative-construction in the face of increasing social
polarisation. I ask: How are experiences of time and projects of heritage shaping narratives of history and place in the
face of industrial change and economic inequality in rural Britain? In my proposed field sites of Newlyn and Mousehole,
Cornwall, the traditional fishing industry has been gradually replaced in economic significance by tourism and the service
sector. Engaging in both an ethnographic and historical investigation, I aim to examine the mechanisms and narratives of
increasing inequality and gentrification in the area. This will entail a study of rural industrial change, rural welfare state
interaction, and the impact of austerity policy and the Covid-19 pandemic in these communities, as well as of
heterogeneous experiences of time and conceptions of place in relation to inequality. I plan on developing a novel, indepth, historical and ethnographic examination of Brexit in British fishing communities, and building an understanding of
how nostalgic sentiment might be actively produced for financial or political ends. I want to explore the capital-driven
development of fishing villages into 'destinations of authenticity' and, through an engagement with local heritage groups,
matters of local politics and identity.
Organisations
People |
ORCID iD |
Christie Van Tinteren (Student) |
Studentship Projects
Project Reference | Relationship | Related To | Start | End | Student Name |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ES/P000738/1 | 01/10/2017 | 30/09/2027 | |||
2645708 | Studentship | ES/P000738/1 | 01/10/2021 | 30/12/2024 | Christie Van Tinteren |