According to its licence plates, tourist brochures, and commercials,
Nova Scotia is Canada's Ocean Playground – an idyllic vacation spot
brimming with traditional cultural experiences. Yet this picturesque
and welcoming ad-friendly façade overlooks the province's history of
industrial development, the impact of resource extraction on its
landscape, and the effects of its painful and still unfinished period
of deindustrialization. Recounting Nova Scotia's struggle to come to
terms with its extractive and industrial past, Nights below Foord
Street focuses on the spaces ignored by the province's annual Doers
and Dreamers tourist guide. Drawing on literary texts by Lynn Coady,
Leo McKay, Sarah Mian, and Jonathan Campbell, popular television shows
such as Trailer Park Boys, and films including Blackbird, Cottonland,
and Poor Boy's Game, Peter Thompson examines the ways in which
contemporary authors, filmmakers, and artists explore the lingering
consequences of the boom-and-bust cycles of mining and manufacturing.
As he demonstrates, these narratives depict a legacy of environmental
exploitation, pollution, intermittent disasters, and labour violence
left behind by the industrial era, all of which contrast starkly with
the romantic and nostalgic portrait of Nova Scotia's industrial
heritage promoted in museums, monuments, and tourist sites.As Donald
Trump and other populist politicians appeal to working-class nostalgia
and international attention converges on environmental racism in
northern Nova Scotia, Nights below Foord Street intervenes into
debates over the cultural and social effects of the post-industrial
economy.
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Literature and Popular Culture in Post-Industrial Nova Scotia
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780228000532
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Vendor
MQUP
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter