Skip to content

The Rise and Fall of Imperial Chemical Industries

Synthetics, Sensism and the Environment

Esther Leslie
Barcode 9783031374319
Hardback

Sold out
Original price £37.55 - Original price £37.55
Original price
£37.55
£37.55 - £37.55
Current price £37.55

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
Out of stock

Release Date: 01/09/2023

Edition: 1st ed. 2023
Genre: History
Sub-Genre: Science Nature & Math
Label: Palgrave Macmillan
Language: English
Publisher: Springer International Publishing AG

Synthetics, Sensism and the Environment
This book provides a history of Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI), a large Britain- based chemical firm which was a major industrial player in the twentieth century.
This book provides a history of Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI), a large Britain- based chemical firm which was a major industrial player in the twentieth century. Once a model for Britain’s industrial reach and dominance, ICI collapsed in the mid-2000s, with some still profitable elements sold off to other chemical firms. The book focuses on the firm’s origin site in the Northeast of England, around Middlesbrough, engaging the remnants of the company magazine, oral histories and social media posts, and material artifacts in the world, to relate a history of the social, environmental, cultural and imaginative and bodily impact of the presence (and then absence) of ICI. This unique work is open to coincidence and speculation, drawing on science fictional and urban myth narratives which emanate from the area. Through the lens of global narratives of industrial and philosophical innovation, it inquires into uncommon and diverse themes, such as the manufacture of Quorn, the place of photographic mediation of the factory, and industrial disease. Setting out from a context of heavy industry and material processing, the book seeks to stimulate poetic and creative thinking around the ways in which people’s lives were enmeshed with synthetic chemicals and the dreams that seemed to ooze and seep from them as by-products.