Manufacturing ruin

"Manufacturing Ruin" argues that the most important moments in the history of the concept and consciousness of "American ruin" accompany volatile episodes of progress and decline in American manufacturing. This dissertation attends to the construction of "American ruin"...

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Main Author: Fassi, Anthony Joseph, III
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/21940
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-219402015-09-20T17:17:30ZManufacturing ruinFassi, Anthony Joseph, IIIRuinsDestructionAmericanAmerican history"Manufacturing Ruin" argues that the most important moments in the history of the concept and consciousness of "American ruin" accompany volatile episodes of progress and decline in American manufacturing. This dissertation attends to the construction of "American ruin" in response to the rise of manufacturing in the early to mid-nineteenth century and the decline of industrial capitalism in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Americans have manufactured picturesque ruins and spectacular episodes of ruination both to conceal and reveal and to "contain" and "harness" destructive forces inherent to capitalism. In some cases, ruins have been represented in ways that conceal processes of ruination inherent to their own destruction. In other instances, episodes of destruction demonstrate that in attending to particular processes of ruination, Americans have intentionally ignored others.text2013-11-05T17:35:08Z2013-052013-05-28May 20132013-11-05T17:35:08Zapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/21940en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Ruins
Destruction
American
American history
spellingShingle Ruins
Destruction
American
American history
Fassi, Anthony Joseph, III
Manufacturing ruin
description "Manufacturing Ruin" argues that the most important moments in the history of the concept and consciousness of "American ruin" accompany volatile episodes of progress and decline in American manufacturing. This dissertation attends to the construction of "American ruin" in response to the rise of manufacturing in the early to mid-nineteenth century and the decline of industrial capitalism in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Americans have manufactured picturesque ruins and spectacular episodes of ruination both to conceal and reveal and to "contain" and "harness" destructive forces inherent to capitalism. In some cases, ruins have been represented in ways that conceal processes of ruination inherent to their own destruction. In other instances, episodes of destruction demonstrate that in attending to particular processes of ruination, Americans have intentionally ignored others. === text
author Fassi, Anthony Joseph, III
author_facet Fassi, Anthony Joseph, III
author_sort Fassi, Anthony Joseph, III
title Manufacturing ruin
title_short Manufacturing ruin
title_full Manufacturing ruin
title_fullStr Manufacturing ruin
title_full_unstemmed Manufacturing ruin
title_sort manufacturing ruin
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/21940
work_keys_str_mv AT fassianthonyjosephiii manufacturingruin
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