Toxic Heritage book: links to readings
Toxic Heritage: Legacies, Futures, and Environmental Injustice. Routledge, 2024.
Title links are to Pressbooks media files. “Routledge” links are to the open access online files.
- Foreword. ALICE MAH
- Toxic Heritage: An Introduction. ELIZABETH KRYDER-REID AND SARAH MAY. Routledge
SECTION 1: Introduction: Framing Toxicity. ELIZABETH KRYDER-REID AND SARAH MAY
- Ch. 1 Toxic Legacies of Slickens in California: A Mobile Heritage of Hydraulic Mining Debris. GARETH HOSKINS. Routledge.
- Visual Essay 1: Extraction Old and New: Toxic Legacies of Mining the Desert in Southwestern Africa. MIKE HANNIS AND SIAN SULLIVAN. Routledge.
- Ch. 2 Of Blaes and Bings: The (Non)toxic Heritage of the West Lothian Oil Shale Industry. JONATHAN GARDNER. Routledge.
- Ch. 3 When Toxic Heritage is Forever: Confronting PFAS Contamination and Toxicity as Lived Experience. THOMAS W. PEARSON AND DANIEL RENFREW. Routledge.
- Ch. 4 Plasticity and Time: Using the Stress-Strain Curve as a Framework for Investigating the Wicked Problems of Marine Pollution and Climate Change. JOHN SCHOFIELD AND CELMARA POCOCK. Routledge
SECTION 2: Introduction: The Politics of Toxic Heritage. ELIZABETH KRYDER-REID AND SARAH MAY
- Ch. 5 Heritage-Led Regeneration and the Sanitisation of Memory in the Lower Swansea Valley. SARAH MAY Routledge.
- Case Study 1: Ghost Wrecks of the Anthropocene: An Enduring Toxic Legacy of the Pacific War. MATTHEW CARTER, ASHLEY MEREDITH, AUGUSTINE C. KOHLER, RANGER WALTER, BILL JEFFERY, AND PAUL HEERSINK. Routledge
- Ch. 6 Military Legacies and Indigenous Heritage in Canada’s Newest National Park Reserve. LISA K. RANKIN, JULIA BRENAN, DAVID M. FINCH, SCOTT NEILSEN, AND ANATOLIJS VENOVCEVS. Routledge.
- Case Study 2: Trash Fires as Toxic Heritage in Palestine. SOPHIA STAMATOPOULOU-ROBBINS. Routledge.
- Ch. 7 Politics of Mining: Toxic Heritage in the Atacama Desert. MARINA WEINBERG AND VALENTINA FIGUEROA. Routledge.
- Case Study 3: Sticky, Stinky, Squalid: The Toxic Leachate of Households’ Waste in an Area of Urban Decay in Tehran (Iran). LEILA PAPOLI-YAZDI. Routledge.
- Ch. 8 Toxic Landmarking and Technoprecarious Heritage in Ghana. PETER CARSKADON LITTLE AND GRACE ABENA AKESE. Routledge.
SECTION 3 Introduction: Affected Communities, Activism, and Agency. ELIZABETH KRYDER-REID AND SARAH MAY
- CH. 9 Reluctant Returns: Repatriating a Poisoned Past. HOLLY CUSACK-MCVEIGH. Routledge.
- Case Study 4: Public Memory of Toxic Displacement: Heavy Metal Contamination and Superfund Remediation in Federally Assisted Housing Communities. ELIZABETH GRENNAN BROWNING. Routledge.
- Visual Essay 2: Translating and Transforming Toxicity: Moving Between Ethnography and Graphic Art. AMELIA FISKE AND JONAS FISCHER. Routledge.
- Ch. 10 Preservation by Demolition: Toxic Heritage in Contemporary China. LORETTA I.T. LOU. Routledge.
- Ch. 11 Unwanted Legacy and Memory of the Milieu: Toxic Materials, Remediation, Habituation (Estarreja, Portugal). FABIENNE WATEAU, CARMEM REGINA GIONGO, DANIELA FIGUEIREDO, JOHNNY REIS, AND MANUELLE LAGO. Routledge.
- Ch.12 Environmental and Embodied Agro-Toxic Heritage in Rural Uruguay: From Recognition to Transition to Sustainability Among Dairy Farmers. VICTORIA EVIA, SANTIAGO ALZUGARAY, AND JAVIER TAKS. Routledge.
SECTION 4 Introduction: Narratives of Toxic Heritage. ELIZABETH KRYDER-REID AND SARAH MAY
- Ch.13 Dirty Laundry: The Toxic Heritage of Dry Cleaning in Indianapolis, Indiana. ELIZABETH KRYDER-REID, OWEN DWYER, AND GABRIEL FILIPPELLI. Routledge.
- Case Study 5: When Cleaning up the Battlefields from When Times of War Have Polluted Soils in Times of Peace: A Case Study of a Silent but Visible Toxic Legacy from the Great War. DANIEL HUBÉ AND TOBIAS BAUSINGER. Routledge.
- Ch.14 Toxic City: Industrial Residues, the Body and Community Activism as Heritage Practice in Glasgow. ARTHUR MCIVOR. Routledge.
- Case Study 6: Rubber as (Toxic) Heritage: Amazonian Knowledge and the Rubber Industry. TIAGO SILVA ALVES MUNIZ. Routledge.
- Case Study 7: Three Memory Frameworks on Chernobyl. MATTEO BENUSSI. Routledge.
- Ch.15 The Toxic Anthracite = Toxic Heritage. PAUL A. SHACKEL. Routledge.
SECTION 5 Introduction: Approaches and Interventions. ELIZABETH KRYDER-REID AND SARAH MAY
- Ch.16 Environmental Justice Tours: Transformative Narratives of Struggle, Solidarity, and Activism. ANA ISABEL BAPTISTA. Routledge.
- Visual Essay 3: Getting the Lead Out, One Community at a Time. GABRIEL FILIPPELLI. Routledge.
- Case Study 8: Climate Museum UK: Practices in Response to the Traumasphere, BRIDGET MCKENZIE. Routledge.
- Ch.17 Toxic Heritage and Reparations: Activating Memory for Environmental and Climate Justice. LIZ ŠEVČENKO. Routledge.
- Case Study 9: From Leftovers to Takeover: Latent Insurgency Amidst the System’s Remnants. ANA VALDERRAMA. Routledge.
- Visual Essay 4: Taking Care of Nuclear Waste. CORNELIUS HOLTORF. Routledge.
- Ch.18 Toxic and Wasted: Artists Thinking About How to Engage With Material Futures, ROSEMARY A. JOYCE. Routledge.
- Conclusion: Why Toxic Heritage Matters. ELIZABETH KRYDER-REID AND SARAH MAY. Routledge.
Routledge press book blurb:
Toxic Heritage addresses the heritage value of contamination and toxic sites and provides the first in-depth examination of toxic Heritage as a global issue.
Bringing together case studies, visual essays, and substantive chapters written by leading scholars from around the world, the volume provides a critical framing of the globally expanding field of toxic heritage. Authors from a variety of disciplinary perspectives and methodologies examine toxic heritage as both a material phenomenon and a concept. Organized into five thematic sections, the book explores the meaning and significance of toxic heritage, politics, narratives, affected communities, and activist approaches and interventions. It identifies critical issues and highlights areas of emerging research on the intersections of environmental harm with formal and informal memory practices, while also highlighting the resilience, advocacy, and creativity of communities, scholars, and heritage professionals in responding to the current environmental crises.