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Beyond Rust: Metropolitan Pittsburgh and the Fate of Industrial America
Contributor(s): Dieterich-Ward, Allen (Author)
ISBN: 0812223926     ISBN-13: 9780812223927
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
OUR PRICE:   $33.20  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: March 2017
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Sociology - Urban
- History | United States - 20th Century
- History | United States - State & Local - Middle Atlantic (dc, De, Md, Nj, Ny, Pa)
Dewey: 307.766
Series: Politics and Culture in Modern America
Physical Information: 0.8" H x 6" W x 9" (1.16 lbs) 360 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - Mid-Atlantic
- Chronological Period - 20th Century
- Demographic Orientation - Urban
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Beyond Rust chronicles the rise, fall, and rebirth of metropolitan Pittsburgh, an industrial region that once formed the heart of the world's steel production and is now touted as a model for reviving other hard-hit cities of the Rust Belt. Writing in clear and engaging prose, historian and area native Allen Dieterich-Ward provides a new model for a truly metropolitan history that integrates the urban core with its regional hinterland of satellite cities, white-collar suburbs, mill towns, and rural mining areas.

Pittsburgh reached its industrial heyday between 1880 and 1920, as vertically integrated industrial corporations forged a regional community in the mountainous Upper Ohio River Valley. Over subsequent decades, metropolitan population growth slowed as mining and manufacturing employment declined. Faced with economic and environmental disaster in the 1930s, Pittsburgh's business elite and political leaders developed an ambitious program of pollution control and infrastructure development. The public-private partnership behind the Pittsburgh Renaissance, as advocates called it, pursued nothing less than the selective erasure of the existing social and physical environment in favor of a modernist, functionally divided landscape: a goal that was widely copied by other aging cities and one that has important ramifications for the broader national story. Ultimately, the Renaissance vision of downtown skyscrapers, sleek suburban research campuses, and bucolic regional parks resulted in an uneven transformation that tore the urban fabric while leaving deindustrializing river valleys and impoverished coal towns isolated from areas of postwar growth.

Beyond Rust is among the first books of its kind to continue past the collapse of American manufacturing in the 1980s by exploring the diverse ways residents of an iconic industrial region sought places for themselves within a new economic order.