Emery Jay
Department of Urban Studies and Planning, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom.
School of Geography, Geology and the Environment, University of Leicester, Leicester, United Kingdom.
Front Sociol. 2020 May 28;5:38. doi: 10.3389/fsoc.2020.00038. eCollection 2020.
This article advances conceptualizations of belonging and alienation among deindustrializing people toward (i) pluralistic temporal and (ii) affective processes. The focus is on belonging and alienation among a deindustrialized generation in the Nottinghamshire coalfield, UK, exploring how various affective-temporal processes mediate capacities, claims, and senses of belonging and alienation. Extant studies suggest that multiple temporal processes constitute deindustrialized places, particularly intergenerational transmissions, declarative memory, and place-histories. Recent work has explored the affective, emotional, and embodied dynamics of these temporal processes. While these literatures are insightful in locating affective and temporal processes of belonging, studies do not have much to say on the relational dynamics of affective-temporal processes in everyday becoming lives and experiences of deindustrializing places. The significance of foregrounding multiple affective-temporal processes of belonging and alienation is because of their relational nature. Advancing understandings of belonging is critical as a coherent sense of belonging is fundamental for individual and social well-being, and the loss of belonging, namely, alienation, informs how former industrial places are lived. Based on autoethnographic, interview and Observant Participation research with participants born between 1984 and 1994, I use ethnographic vignettes to delineate multiple relating affective-temporal processes of belonging and alienation of a generation that came after coal. The first vignette concerns the embodied and affective relationalities of intergenerational transmission and becoming in a deindustrialized world through the lens of masculinity, place and belonging. The second vignette examines nostalgic and traumatic shared declarative memories contingent of living through and with deindustrialization. The third vignette looks at intersections of place histories, silenced memory and local pride and shame, drawing out the significance of space and place to class-based experiences. Weaved through the stories are thematic threads of class, place, alienation, belonging, and temporality. Bringing these threads together, the paper then discusses the relationalities between issues covered, emphasizing the mutual contingencies between affective-temporal processes of belonging and alienation. I end by calling for shared affective-temporal processes of belonging and alienation to form the basis of a renewed solidarity, attenuation of alienation and a means to belong.
本文提出了后工业化人群中归属与疏离的概念,涉及(i)多元时间性和(ii)情感过程。重点关注英国诺丁汉郡煤田后工业化一代中的归属与疏离,探讨各种情感 - 时间过程如何调节归属与疏离的能力、主张和感受。现有研究表明,多种时间过程构成了后工业化地区,特别是代际传承、陈述性记忆和地方历史。最近的研究探讨了这些时间过程的情感、情绪和身体动态。虽然这些文献在定位归属的情感和时间过程方面很有见地,但对于后工业化地区日常生活和经历中情感 - 时间过程的关系动态,研究却鲜有涉及。突出归属与疏离的多种情感 - 时间过程的重要性在于它们的关系本质。深化对归属的理解至关重要,因为连贯的归属感是个人和社会福祉的基础,而归属感的丧失,即疏离,影响着前工业地区的生活方式。基于对1984年至1994年出生的参与者进行的自我民族志、访谈和观察参与研究,我使用民族志小品文来描绘煤炭之后一代人归属与疏离的多种相关情感 - 时间过程。第一个小品文通过男性气质、地方和归属的视角,关注代际传承在去工业化世界中的身体和情感关系以及形成过程。第二个小品文审视了经历去工业化并与之相伴的怀旧和创伤性共享陈述性记忆。第三个小品文着眼于地方历史、沉默记忆与地方自豪感和羞耻感的交叉点,揭示空间和地方对基于阶级的经历的重要性。贯穿这些故事的是阶级、地方、疏离、归属和时间性的主题线索。将这些线索汇聚在一起,本文接着讨论所涵盖问题之间的关系,强调归属与疏离的情感 - 时间过程之间的相互依存关系。最后,我呼吁形成共享的归属与疏离情感 - 时间过程,以此作为新团结的基础、减轻疏离的手段和归属的方式。