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Futures after Progress

Hope and Doubt in Late Industrial Baltimore

A powerful ethnographic study of South Baltimore, a place haunted by toxic pasts in its pursuit of better futures.

Factory fires, chemical explosions, and aerial pollutants have inexorably shaped South Baltimore into one of the most polluted places in the country. In Futures after Progress, anthropologist Chloe Ahmann explores the rise and fall of industrial lifeways on this edge of the city and the uncertainties that linger in their wake. Writing from the community of Curtis Bay, where two hundred years of technocratic hubris have carried lethal costs, Ahmann also follows local efforts to realize a good future after industry and the rifts competing visions opened between neighbors.
 
Examining tensions between White and Black residents, environmental activists and industrial enthusiasts, local elders and younger generations, Ahmann shows how this community has become a battleground for competing political futures whose stakes reverberate beyond its six square miles in a present after progress has lost steam. And yet—as one young resident explains—“that’s not how the story ends.” Rigorous and moving, Futures after Progress probes the deep roots of our ecological predicament, offering insight into what lies ahead for a country beset by dreams deferred and a planet on the precipice of change.

An open access version of this book is available.


336 pages | 8 color plates, 32 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2024

Anthropology: Cultural and Social Anthropology

Geography: Urban Geography

History: American History, Environmental History, Urban History

Reviews

“I began this book as an anthropologist, but a few pages in, realized I was reading it as the little Black boy who acquired a chronic respiratory illness while growing up in Baltimore. I was playing football outside and suddenly couldn’t breathe. Then an ambulance came. Before long, inhalers, respirators, and ventilators were a feature of everyday life—both for me and my two brothers, who also suffered from asthma. I wish we had Ahmann’s book back then. Maybe, just maybe, we would’ve better understood the uncertainties of a childhood existence defined by hazy and noxious forces that threatened to debilitate and kill us. Written with empathy and backed by rigorous analysis, Futures after Progress is a revelation.”

Laurence Ralph, author of Sito: An American Teenager and the City that Failed Him

“Ahmann folds time and space in this stunning ethnography to ask how a future tense forms after sacrifice, resilience, and progress are exhausted—a vital intervention into contemporary conditions.”

Joseph Masco, University of Chicago

Table of Contents

Map of the Curtis Bay Region
Preface: The Dust

Introduction
Hope and Doubt in Late Industrial Baltimore

Part One: A Cautionary Tale
Impossible to Say

Chapter One
Forgotten in Anticipation

Little Boxes

Chapter Two
Cataclysmic Hypotheticals

Buying Time

Chapter Three
Could’ve Been Worse

Part Two: Not How the Story Ends
Beautiful City

Chapter Four
Art of the Possible

Out of Nothing

Chapter Five
Tick, Tick, BOOM

A Black Hole

Epilogue
Ethnography in the Subjunctive

Acknowledgments
Notes
References
Index

Awards

Anthropology and Environment Society of the American Anthropological Association (AAA): Julian Steward Award
Honorable Mention

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