Renaissance

Scenes of Industrial Reconversion in the Nord-Pas-de-Calais Coalfield

Omschrijving

Photographic analysis of the mining region’s transition to culture and leisure economies The Nord-Pas-de-Calais mining region, bordering on Belgium, is part of northern Europe’s historical centre of heavy industry, which extends as far as the Ruhr area in Germany. With the end of coal mining in the 1980s, the Lille region transitioned to new economic activities, particularly within the cultural and creative industries, taking advantage of its strategic location midway between Paris, London and Brussels. After de-industrialisation and the 1984 opening of the Lewarde Mining Museum—the first institution of its kind in France—the region took part in industrial heritage campaigns modelled on the Ruhr industrial region. Various historical sites in coal-mining areas in this region and in Belgium were classified as World Heritage Sites by UNESCO in 2012. 'Renaissance' (2014) presents a photographic analysis of the epochal transition from industry to culture and leisure economies and is organised around eight groups of a varying numbers of photographs. It sheds a light on the Nord-Pas-de-Calais mining region’s place in the European history of the capitalist nation-state. The artist Jorge Ribalta offers a contribution to the critique on the myths and utopian promises of cultural economies. His photographic work interrogates the correspondence between the decline of industrial economies in Europe and the crisis of the middle class. The Nord-Pas-de-Calais mining region, bordering on Belgium, is part of northern Europe’s historical centre of heavy industry, which extends as far as the Ruhr area in Germany. With the end of coal mining in the 1980s, the Lille region transitioned to new economic activities, particularly within the cultural and creative industries, taking advantage of its strategic location midway between Paris, London and Brussels. After de-industrialisation and the 1984 opening of the Lewarde Mining Museum—the first institution of its kind in France—the region took part in industrial heritage campaigns modelled on the Ruhr industrial region. Various historical sites in coal-mining areas in this region and in Belgium were classified as World Heritage Sites by UNESCO in 2012. Renaissance (2014) presents a photographic analysis of the epochal transition from industry to culture and leisure economies and is organised around eight groups of a varying numbers of photographs. It sheds a light on the Nord-Pas-de-Calais mining region’s place in the European history of the capitalist nation-state. The artist Jorge Ribalta offers a contribution to the critique on the myths and utopian promises of cultural economies. His photographic work interrogates the correspondence between the decline of industrial economies in Europe and the crisis of the middle class. Acknowledgements Renaissance From Charles V to Louis XIV Small History of Photography Borinage Monuments Mining Museum, Lewarde Becoming Heritage New/Old Economy eisure Renaissance? Documentary Methods, Post-industrial Economies and Ideologies on Cultural Heritage Panel discussion with Muriel Enjalran, Jacques Lemière, Jorge Ribalta and Hilde Van Gelder Renaissance ? Méthodes documentaires, économies postindustrielles et idéologies du patrimoine culturel Débat avec Muriel Enjalran, Jacques Lemière, Jorge Ribalta and Hilde Van Gelder Author and Contributors
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Schrijver
Ribalta, Jorge
Titel
Renaissance
Uitgever
Leuven University Press
Jaar
2019
Taal
Engels
Pagina's
280
Gewicht
855 gr
EAN
9789462701595
Afmetingen
233 x 173 x 23 mm
Bindwijze
Paperback

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