What is it about?
Nostalgia for some is pointless and sentimental, for others reactionary and futile. Where does that leave those of us interested in labour history and heritage – is it all just ‘smokestack nostalgia’? Using interviews with visitors, volunteers and staff at sites and museums of industrial and working class heritage in England, the United States and Australia, we argue that a useful distinction can be made between ‘reactionary nostalgia’ and ‘progressive nostalgia’, and that a ‘nostalgia for the future’ can emerge from memories and memorialisations. Drawing on the past can help mould the sentiments and nurture the emotional commitment to social justice issues the Left so desperately needs.
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Why is it important?
Drawing on interview material, we look at issues of deindustrialisation and nostalgia - important issues in the context of increasing rightwing populism, and argue nostalgia is not necessarily or always reactionary.
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: ‘Nostalgia for the future’: memory, nostalgia and the politics of class, International Journal of Heritage Studies, May 2017, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/13527258.2017.1321034.
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