How have individuals and communities responded to change and interacted with their environments? In Earth and Industry: Stories from Gippsland, Erik Eklund and Julie Fenley assemble contributors to examine historic and contemporary relations of people and the environment in an area - Gippsland, Victoria, Australia - built upon a many-layered history of environmental changes and modifications, and once again on the cusp of rapid economic and social change. Taking account of Aboriginal and 'white' relations, 'old' and 'new' forms of pastoralism and agriculture, water and coastal management and fishing, mining and industrialisation, forestry, heritage management, and increasing political tensions in relation to the environment, the result is a story of challenges, hardships and conflicts, as well as resourcefulness and innovation. The collection offers an encompassing portrait of the region, exploring its historical, social and geographical diversity. It takes us to parts of the region which belie the predominant media image of the smoke stacks of the Latrobe Valley, but will also be of interest to those seeking to understand the complex interplay of 'country' and 'city' within a world of international economic connections and flows.
Erik Eklund is a Professor of History at the Gippsland campus of Federation University with a strong interest in regional, community and labour history. He has worked at the Gippsland campus since 2008. His most recent book, Mining Towns: Making a Living, Making a Life, was published in 2012 by UNSW Press. His previous work, Steel Town: The Making and Breaking of Port Kembla, won the NSW Premier's Prize for Regional and Community History in 2003. He is currently the Keith Cameron Visiting Professor of Australian History at University College Dublin.
Julie Fenley is the Director of the Centre for Gippsland Studies, a regional research facility and repository at Federation University's Gippsland campus. She also lectures in history and conducts research in Aboriginal history, public history and museum studies. She has completed a number of heritage consultancies, including a study of the Dr Andrew and Andrew family collection at Old Gippstown.