Big Rural - (Studies in Urban-Rural Dynamics) by Crystal Cook Marshall (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- In Big Rural: Rural Industrial Places, Democracy, and What Next, Crystal Cook Marshall unveils the rural not as wild and unknowable but as measured and intervened-in as big cities.
- About the Author: Crystal Cook Marshall is director at The North Carolina AgrAbility Partnership (NC AgrAbility) and is faculty at North Carolina A&T State University.
- 280 Pages
- Social Science, Sociology
- Series Name: Studies in Urban-Rural Dynamics
Description
About the Book
In Big Rural, Crystal Cook Marshall unveils the rural not as wild and unknowable but as measured and intervened-in as big cities, deserving of conceptual rethinking and fresh research, policy, and practical approaches for the benefit of both their citizens and their environments.Book Synopsis
In Big Rural: Rural Industrial Places, Democracy, and What Next, Crystal Cook Marshall unveils the rural not as wild and unknowable but as measured and intervened-in as big cities. Drawing international comparisons with a case study centering on the Pocahontas Coalfield, Cook Marshall documents that rural places are often systems among systems that scientists and engineers heavily shape both in landscape and culture. Often single sector economies with consolidated power and automation away of jobs, these rural industrial places compound the problems of their inhabitants, even threatening their capacity to practice democracy. Cook Marshall interacts with rural interveners from industry to Rural Studies and Science and Technology scholars to policy advocates, also detailing the gaps in related scholarship. Building from analysis, she proposes a range of antidotes to the extraction and destruction of "Big Rural" both in material life and in knowledge, such as potential National Rural and Sustainable Agricultural strategies. Through these, in interviews with rural change agents, through research, and through local and federal paths, Cook Marshall asserts a way forward for the rural that is more equitable and just.Review Quotes
"This fascinating work focuses on the coalfields of West Virginia through a social-technical lens that traces the connections between industrial rural spaces and the larger culture. As part of a series on urban-rural dynamics, Big Rural supports the theme of "rural places, resources, and people being exploited--at a distance--for urban benefit." This work is valuable for examining the "cultural meaning of industry," deconstructing the equation of rural with white male workers and using an empirical approach that incorporates field research and interviews with miners and energy engineers in the Pocahontas Coalfield. Cook Marshall includes interlude sections with words from the individuals living in these communities, who are often absent or excluded from research and representation. The biggest conclusion she draws is how "fossil fuel and other natural resource extraction industries" shape regional culture and space through the mechanisms of science and technology. She posits that the absent capitalists create systems that transform rural places and spaces and result in "severe social, cultural, economic, and environmental consequences, which can be highly damaging and detrimental." Highly informative and well written, this work finds gaps in the research, describes coalfield realities, and offers strategies for correcting damage to rural communities. Highly recommended. Advanced undergraduates through faculty; two-year technical program students." --Choice Reviews
"In a clear, eminently practical, utterly heartfelt, disarmingly honest, and exhaustively researched voice, Crystal Cook Marshall urges us to observe, think, and talk carefully and imaginatively about "big rural"--the rural space that connects us all in vital and identifiable ways to Appalachia and to the Pocahontas Coalfield. Dr. Cook Marshall brings together and listens intently to an extraordinary range of variously informed opinions and policies, scientific and engineering research, and personal desires regarding Appalachia past, present and future. Yet, she cannot abide easy answers. She stands, in that cold gray light of dawn, both weary and hopeful about Appalachia. She shows us how and what we can learn from big rural about our collective human future. It's a complex and compelling future. I can think of no better guide than Crystal Cook Marshall." --James Collier, Associate Professor of Science and Technology, Virginia TechIn a clear, eminently practical, utterly heartfelt, disarmingly honest, and exhaustively researched voice, Crystal Cook Marshall urges us to observe, think, and talk carefully and imaginatively about "big rural"--the rural space that connects us all in vital and identifiable ways to Appalachia and to the Pocahontas Coalfield. Dr. Cook Marshall brings together and listens intently to an extraordinary range of variously informed opinions and policies, scientific and engineering research, and personal desires regarding Appalachia past, present and future. Yet, she cannot abide easy answers. She stands, in that cold gray light of dawn, both weary and hopeful about Appalachia. She shows us how and what we can learn from big rural about our collective human future. It's a complex and compelling future. I can think of no better guide than Crystal Cook Marshall.
This fascinating work focuses on the coalfields of West Virginia through a social-technical lens that traces the connections between industrial rural spaces and the larger culture. As part of a series on urban-rural dynamics, Big Rural supports the theme of "rural places, resources, and people being exploited--at a distance--for urban benefit." This work is valuable for examining the "cultural meaning of industry," deconstructing the equation of rural with white male workers and using an empirical approach that incorporates field research and interviews with miners and energy engineers in the Pocahontas Coalfield. Cook Marshall includes interlude sections with words from the individuals living in these communities, who are often absent or excluded from research and representation. The biggest conclusion she draws is how "fossil fuel and other natural resource extraction industries" shape regional culture and space through the mechanisms of science and technology. She posits that the absent capitalists create systems that transform rural places and spaces and result in "severe social, cultural, economic, and environmental consequences, which can be highly damaging and detrimental." Highly informative and well written, this work finds gaps in the research, describes coalfield realities, and offers strategies for correcting damage to rural communities. Highly recommended. Advanced undergraduates through faculty; two-year technical program students.
About the Author
Crystal Cook Marshall is director at The North Carolina AgrAbility Partnership (NC AgrAbility) and is faculty at North Carolina A&T State University.