Mieres Reborn

The Reinvention of a Catalan Community

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Social Science, Sociology, Rural, Anthropology
Cover of the book Mieres Reborn by Alexander F. Robertson, University of Alabama Press
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Author: Alexander F. Robertson ISBN: 9780817385972
Publisher: University of Alabama Press Publication: April 9, 2012
Imprint: University Alabama Press Language: English
Author: Alexander F. Robertson
ISBN: 9780817385972
Publisher: University of Alabama Press
Publication: April 9, 2012
Imprint: University Alabama Press
Language: English

Mieres Reborn reveals how patient observation and an analysis of one small community have much to tell us about human progress more generally.

 

Not long ago Mieres, a village in the eastern foothills of the Pyrenees, seemed destined to die. As in countless thousands of rural communities around the world, young people in Mieres over the years have moved to the towns and cities, leaving behind abandoned fields and meadows, derelict houses, and their aging and disconsolate parents and grandparents.

 

Close observation of this social microcosm over two decades reveals the capacity of ordinary people in a locality to reinvent themselves, reconstruct relationships with the wider world, and confront new threats to their collective survival. A. F. Robertson describes how the determination that Mieres should survive is most evident in a vigorous round of fiestas, fairs, and other public events in which natives, exiles, and newcomers work to create a lively sense of belonging. Since the 1980s, Mieres has been enlivened by a reverse flow of migrants from the cities, new settlers who have brought an infusion of youth to the community, devised new livelihoods, revitalized the village school, energized the native ”Mierencs,” and provided the impetus for a rediscovery of historical roots and political identity.

 

The regeneration of life in the countryside, in part a reaction to urban expansion and decay, is a global phenomenon of increasing political, economic, and social significance.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Mieres Reborn reveals how patient observation and an analysis of one small community have much to tell us about human progress more generally.

 

Not long ago Mieres, a village in the eastern foothills of the Pyrenees, seemed destined to die. As in countless thousands of rural communities around the world, young people in Mieres over the years have moved to the towns and cities, leaving behind abandoned fields and meadows, derelict houses, and their aging and disconsolate parents and grandparents.

 

Close observation of this social microcosm over two decades reveals the capacity of ordinary people in a locality to reinvent themselves, reconstruct relationships with the wider world, and confront new threats to their collective survival. A. F. Robertson describes how the determination that Mieres should survive is most evident in a vigorous round of fiestas, fairs, and other public events in which natives, exiles, and newcomers work to create a lively sense of belonging. Since the 1980s, Mieres has been enlivened by a reverse flow of migrants from the cities, new settlers who have brought an infusion of youth to the community, devised new livelihoods, revitalized the village school, energized the native ”Mierencs,” and provided the impetus for a rediscovery of historical roots and political identity.

 

The regeneration of life in the countryside, in part a reaction to urban expansion and decay, is a global phenomenon of increasing political, economic, and social significance.

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