Article ID: CBB454050976

Returning to Nature, Dwelling in the City: Ecological Imagery and Models of History in Detroit Ruin Photography (2019)

unapi

This essay reads ruin photography as an attempt to interpret and respond to an apparent crisis in the modern project of progressive development and in the discourse of active human actors and passive nonhuman environments on which that project is founded. It identifies two distinct modes of contemporary ruin aesthetics: the first seeks to salvage the developmental model of history by identifying ruins as blank "natural" spaces open to development, and the second treats ruins as material evidence of the failure and deleterious consequences of development. The essay argues that in this second mode, images of urban ruins can be powerful tools for critiquing and dismantling modern understandings of history and human ecology.

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Authors & Contributors
Cohen, Jean-Louis
Nieto-Galan, Agustí
Hersey, Mark D.
Hochadel, Oliver
Jonnes, Jill
Light, Jennifer S.
Journals
Environment and History
American Historical Review
History and Technology
Transfers
Historical Archaeology
Publishers
University of Pennsylvania Press
Cambridge University Press
Brill
Johns Hopkins University Press
New York University Press
Oxford University Press
Concepts
Urban history
Cities and towns
Urban planning
Environmental hygiene; Human ecology
Infrastructure
Public health
Time Periods
20th century
19th century
20th century, early
Modern
21st century
Medieval
Places
United States
Detroit (Michigan)
Paris (France)
Soviet Union
Pennsylvania (U.S.)
Brussels (Belgium)
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