Rural Modernity in Britain

RHN 157/2018 | Publication

Kristin Bluemel, Michael McCluskey (eds), Rural Modernity in Britain. A Critical Intervention, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press 2018.

 

Rural Modernity in Britain argues that the rural areas of Britain were impacted by modernisation just as much – if not more – than urban and suburban areas. It is the first study of modernity and modernism to focus on rural people and places that experienced economic depression, the expansion of transportation and communication networks, the roll out of electricity, the loss of land, and the erosion of local identities. Who celebrated these changes? Who resisted them? Who documented them?

Essays in this collection make the case that the rural means more than just the often-studied countryside of southern England, a retreat from the consequences of modernity; rather, the rural emerges as a source for new versions of the modern, with an active role in the formation and development of British experiences and representations of modernity.

 

Source: https://edinburghuniversitypress.com/book-rural-modernity-in-britain.html