Sign for Notice Everyday    注册| 登陆| 友情链接| English|

Our Sponsors


    Rust, Regeneration and Romance: Iron and Steel Landscapes and Cultures

    View: 511

    Website http://www.birmingham.ac.uk/schools/iaa/departments/ironbridge/events/index.aspx | Want to Edit it Edit Freely

    Category anthropology; archaeology; art history; architecture; engineering; ethnology; heritage studies; history; geography; landscape studies; linguistics; metallurgy; museum studies; sociology; tourism studies

    Deadline: January 31, 2013 | Date: July 10, 2013-July 14, 2013

    Venue/Country: Ironbridge, U.K.

    Updated: 2012-08-08 20:26:32 (GMT+9)

    Call For Papers - CFP

    International Conference Announcement and Call for Papers

    Ironbridge International Institute for Cultural Heritage, University of Birmingham

    and

    The Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust

    Rust, Regeneration and Romance: Iron and Steel Landscapes and Cultures

    10-14 July 2013, Ironbridge, UK

    For centuries iron and steel have been the fundamental building blocks of modernity. These metals and the technologies, societies and cultures surrounding them have revolutionised the lives of billions of people. From the earliest functional usage of iron in domestic life, to decorative cast iron, from weapons to knives and forks and from the use of high tensile steels in buildings around the world to the stainless steels of space exploration, the transformative power of iron and steel is undeniable. This capacity to transform extends to the landscapes and cultures which have themselves been transformed through the mining, production, processing and consumption of iron and steel. As China and India race to modernise their economies with imported iron and steel, many cities across Europe and North America are still struggling with the decline in production and manufacture. In many parts of Europe former centres of iron and steel production have undergone regeneration and now form part of the tourism economy. Rust has gained currency as part of industrial heritage. Still, in many parts of the developing world, ideas of heritage lie very much in the future, as communities continue to work in the mining of iron ore and the production and fabrication of steel.

    This conference seeks to engage in an open multi-disciplinary analysis of iron and steel landscapes and cultures, from the ancient to the modern. It looks toward the legacies of both production and consumption and how these metals have influenced all aspects of social life. We wish to explore the relationships that communities, regions, nations share with iron and steel through its functional use, creative and artistic use and its symbolic use. Indicative questions the conference will address are: How are economies and societies transformed by the extraction and processing of iron? How does the environmental impact and legacy of iron and steel sites shape social and political life? How do governments and communities deal with both the expansion and decline of the iron and steel industries? What are the forms and formats of regeneration for iron and steel landscapes and communities? To what extent are global communities connected through iron and steel, economically and culturally? How have the landscapes and cultures of iron and steel found expression through various art forms? How are these landscapes managed and understood?

    The conference welcomes academics from the widest range of disciplines and wishes to act as a forum for exchange between the sciences, social sciences and the humanities. The conference will draw from anthropology, archaeology, art history, architecture, engineering, ethnology, heritage studies, history, geography, landscape studies, linguistics, metallurgy, museum studies, sociology, tourism studies etc. The conference will take place at the Ironbridge Gorge World Heritage Site.

    Indicative themes of interest to the conference include:

    ? Understanding iron and steel landscapes ? historic and contemporary perspectives

    ? Human ? technology relationships

    ? Challenges in the presentation and interpretation of iron and steel heritage

    ? Touring and tourism in iron and steel landscapes

    ? Histories and ethnographies of iron and steel communities - labour relations and working environments

    ? Architectural tropes surrounding mining and fabrication

    ? Representations of iron and steel cultures in the ‘popular’ media

    ? The ‘cultural industries’ (arts, sport, tourism, etc.) in the regeneration of iron and steel communities

    ? Languages of steel cities ? dialects and territories

    ? Symbolic economies of iron and steel - iconography, art and design

    Abstracts of 300 words with a clear title should be sent as soon as possible but no later than January 31st 2013 to ironbridgeatcontacts.bham.ac.uk.

    Please be sure to include your full contact details.

    Information will be updated on the website http://ironandsteel2013.wordpress.com/.

    With best wishes

    Professor Mike Robinson

    Chair of Cultural Heritage

    University of Birmingham


    Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
    Disclaimer: ourGlocal is an open academical resource system, which anyone can edit or update. Usually, journal information updated by us, journal managers or others. So the information is old or wrong now. Specially, impact factor is changing every year. Even it was correct when updated, it may have been changed now. So please go to Thomson Reuters to confirm latest value about Journal impact factor.