Abstract
Keywords
Introduction
Loїc Wacquant's concept of territorial stigmatisation (Wacquant, 2007; Wacquant et al., 2014) has been widely mobilised in contemporary critiques of governing marginality. It forms a key pillar of the wider concept of advanced marginality (Wacquant, 2008a) and is central to his ongoing project of ‘…disentangl[ing] the triangular nexus of class fragmentation, ethnic division and state-crafting in the polarising city’ (Wacquant, 2019: 24). Wacquant's concept is indeed a theory of the neoliberal
The starting point for this paper is somewhat different, however. Rather than providing another commentary charting experiences of urban marginality, our contribution is to critique and extend Wacquant's concept to what might be considered
In bringing Wacquant's analytical framework into dialogue with notions of deindustrialised ruination, we also emphasise the limited attention afforded to physical space in Wacquant's theorising of territorial stigmatisation (see also Watt, 2020). Like others, we contend that physical landscapes – or as we suggest later, ‘terrains’ – are ‘…real and physical rather than simply cognised or imagined or represented’ where their physicality ‘…profoundly affects the way we think, feel, move and act’ (Tilley, 2010: 26). In adopting this position, we recognise that physical properties can provide visible symbols for deepening the stigmatisation of a place and its people (Castán Broto et al., 2007; Larsen and Delica, 2019: 548) whilst simultaneously providing scope for narratives of stigma to be resisted (Nayak, 2019; Sisson, 2021). Against this context, we discuss the potential offered by a relational conceptualisation of affordances (Chemero, 2003) as a complement to habitus formation in more fully integrating physical space within conceptualisations of territorial stigmatisation.
The analytical focus of the paper falls on the coalfield communities of the Welsh Valleys (henceforth ‘the Valleys’) in the UK as one such example of a peripheral, deindustrialised ‘area of relegation’ (Bennett et al., 2000). The Valleys (see Figure 1) are an example of a landscape that has been transformed through human intervention in direct response to changing energy needs from the early 19th century stemming from the intensification of coal and mineral exploitation (Llewellyn et al., 2019). With the rapid decline of UK coal mining in the latter half of the 20th century, social deprivation in the Valleys deepened, exacerbated by the geographical isolation and dependency of many Valley communities on a single industry and in many cases, a single employer (Bennett et al., 2000). Our contention is that the differing historical trajectories, challenging terrains, isolated geographies, ruptured social relations and internal organisation of places such as the Valleys mark them out as distinct outliers within Wacquant's schema (see Wacquant et al., 2014). The Valleys have been characterised as an ‘…important tract wedged in the no-man's land between “rural” and “big city”: the depressed, post-industrial, peri-urban, small town and semi-rural areas’ (Bevan, 2015, quoted in Llewellyn et al., 2019: 805).

South Wales coalfield communities.
In focusing on the Valleys, we seek to make a conceptual contribution to debates on territorial stigmatisation in more fully integrating isolation and the physical landscape into Wacquant's interdependent triad of physical, social and symbolic space and articulating the relationship to habitus formation, intergenerational effects and the wider power relations in which Valleys coalfields are situated over time. In doing so, the paper also contributes to the literature on coalfields as ‘post-industrial laboratories’ (Strangleman, 2018). This body of work has advanced a historically informed understanding of deindustrialisation as an
The first is in tracing long-term shifts and fluctuations in power balances in the (re-)positioning of coalfields within national and international space. Existing accounts of territorial stigmatisation have tended to centre on urban locales of relegation that can pragmatically be understood in Wacquant's schema as ‘ghettos’, ‘hyperghettos’ or ‘anti-ghettos’: anti-ghettos refer to very diverse, porous and transient neighbourhoods; while ghettos and hyperghettos are devices for the spatial confinement and seclusion of racialised groups (see Wacquant 2004b, 2008a, 2008b, 2009, 2012). The Welsh Valleys defy classification along these lines and are more readily associated with the Welsh white working class (Table 1). The unique terrain, relative isolation and lack of diversity, vis-a-vis urban locations, mark the Valleys out as a particularly insightful case in nuancing and understanding the longer-term production of territorial stigmatisation for spaces beyond the urban (see Bevan, 2015). Conversely, territorial stigmatisation as a theoretical lens can address the relative lack of attention to the external stigmatisation of the South Wales coalfield and its longer run effects (though see Byrne et al., 2015, 2016; Elliott et al., 2020 for innovative accounts of stigma and resistance in Merthyr Tydfil).
Context indicators – South Wales coalfield communities.
Calculated from the 2011 Census of Population using Lower Super Output Area (LSOA) counts aggregated to the South Wales Coalfield defined by Sheffield Hallam University as part of the
Calculated from the 2011 Census of Population using Lower Super Output Area (LSOA) counts aggregated to the South Wales Coalfield by the highest level of qualification.
No. of employee jobs in area per 100 residents of working age, 2017 (Beatty et al., 2019).
Second, recent research demonstrates the existence of more nuanced orientations and behavioural responses in calling for ‘a more explicit micro inclusion of habitus’ (Blokland, 2019). We add to recent debates on contemporary habitus formation that has explored the fragmented habitus, from a Bourdieusian perspective (see Silva, 2016; Friedman, 2016), by introducing Elias’s (2001) conceptualisation of the
The third is in interrogating the intersection of the physical landscape, industrial ruination and
The remainder of the paper is divided into three parts. The next section sets out Wacquant's approach alongside the ways in which the Valleys coalfield diverges from and potentially advances existing accounts of territorial stigmatisation. It also highlights the value of the coalfields as a ‘post-industrial’ laboratory; and the Valleys in particular where the specific terrain and isolation make for a unique and fruitful geographical context to study social and economic change (Strangleman, 2018). Section two presents our analysis, which centres on the three key, interrelated and mutually reinforcing areas of divergence in advancing territorial stigmatisation in application to the South Wales coalfield: shifting social and economic interdependencies with the outside alongside deindustrialisation; lagged habitus and intergenerational change internally; and challenging terrain and relative isolation discussed in relation to affordances. The final section concludes with some reflections on how our analysis can aid the refinement and extension of Wacquant's theorising, contribute to the rich sociology of coalfield communities, and how the approach adopted might be advanced theoretically and methodologically.
Wacquant in the Valleys: Extending territorial stigmatisation
Wacquant's concept is a totalising framework of (urban) marginality (see Bourdieu and Wacquant, 1992; Delica and Hansen, 2016) where, drawing on Bourdieu, he develops an interpretation of territorial stigmatisation framed around the concepts of
First,
Second,
Third,
Finally,
Against this backdrop, territorial stigmatisation – built from fusing Goffman's notion of the management of ‘spoiled identity’ with Bourdieu's bureaucratic field and symbolic power – reveals ‘…how, through the mediation of cognitive mechanisms operating at multiple enmeshed levels, the spatial denigration of neighbourhoods of relegation affects the subjectivity and the social ties of their residents as well as the state policies that mould them’ (Wacquant, 2019: 40). It manifests as a ‘blemish of place’ – perpetuated at a range of discursive levels from everyday to media and policy – that latches onto specific spaces and informs perceptions of that space from the outside, impacts experiences on the inside, and contributes to the relative positioning of spaces within the space of positions (regional, national and international).
Here it is important to recognise that Wacquant developed the concept of territorial stigmatisation in the contexts of the Black American Chicago ghetto and the ethnically diverse Parisian
Territorial stigmatisation and ‘advanced marginality tend to be understood as concentrated in isolated and bounded territories increasingly perceived by both insiders and outsiders as social purgatories, leprous Badlands
Set against this context, it is recognised that techniques of measurement and control of terrain (and land) serve to anchor narratives that help to naturalise state-spatial and territorial interventions that are implicated in the active production of stigma and marginality (Sisson, 2021). The physical terrain of the Welsh Valleys features prominently in discussions of inequality and disadvantage, including in relation to sub-national boundary-making and in representations of the physical isolation of the Valleys (see Jones et al., 2013, 2020). Yet at the same time, the Valleys are also differentiated on socio-economic, symbolic and political lines from the city of Cardiff and the nascent city-regional imaginary underpinning the CCR (Waite, 2015; Jones et al., 2020). Neither are they ethnically diverse nor characterised by racialised, internal division such as
The case of the Valleys therefore addresses a key gap in the existing territorial stigmatisation literature in terms of the relative absence of non-urban, peripheral landscapes of ‘industrial ruination’ (see Emery, 2019, 2020b). The focus on the Welsh Valleys is particularly enlightening where the
These spaces are representative of specific, time-stamped
Territorial stigmatisation and deindustrialisation in the Welsh coalfields
This section draws upon a rich and multidisciplinary body of scholarship on the UK coalfields and specific historical accounts of South Wales mining communities. It foregrounds the deep interrelationship between deindustrialisation (as an ongoing process), habitus formation and territorial stigmatisation and demonstrates how the intermeshing of these dynamic processes shows a particular character in the Valleys distinctive from that in urban zones of denigration.
A historical lens emphasizes the longer-term significance of transformations in social interdependencies and the de-densification of relations that accompany deindustrialisation, while also exposing the intergenerational disruptions to the rhythms and institutions of sociability and habitus formation. Valley coalfield communities emerge here as a particularly useful empirical context through which to explore and articulate the interplay between shifting social interdependencies (a demotion in the hierarchy), industrial ruination, habitus formation and affordances. Carrying these concepts together – in dynamic interdependence – helps avoid overly deterministic renderings (of habitus or environmental determinisms for example) of territorial stigmatisation and its effects, but it also hopefully shows the potential value of a unified analytical frame that takes terrain and physical space seriously and helps better integrate it with social and symbolic processes.
Shifting social interdependencies and spaces of positions
We use the term ‘social interdependencies’ here to refer to the range of webs and networks of relations that constitute social life (within the social space of the Valleys). In Bourdieu's terms, the relational positioning of the Valleys in national and international contexts has been weakened through deindustrialisation in ways that have altered the physical and symbolic space of the Valleys and undermined internal solidarity and identification (Bourdieu, 2018; Wacquant, 2008a). Be they framed economically, politically, institutionally, culturally or technologically, relations and associations are always powerfully
Focusing on the changing social interdependencies of the Welsh Valleys over time allows for the acknowledgement of the dynamic relations of individuals, groups
As once central to the engine of the colonial expansion of the British Empire, employment in the South Wales coalfield peaked in 1920 at just over 270,000 jobs (Curtis, 2013). Coal flowed from South Wales and its labour on coal-fuelled trains bound for far-flung places that tied the Valleys into a national and global circulation of capital (Morgan, 2014). Mining, miners and coalfield communities were lynchpins of industrial development, prompting George Orwell's famous statement that ‘our civilisation is founded on coal’ (cited in Arnold, 2016: 92). The General Strike of 1926, and the Great Depression that followed soon after, contributed to a rapid decline in mining employment, which had more than halved from its peak by 1936 (126,000). The relative integration of the Welsh Valleys within the context of an international coal industry in the 19th and early 20th centuries had been undone, with those interdependencies with the outside severely weakened and reconfigured over time (Jones, 1992: 349). For example, for most men in the pit villages of the Valleys in the early 1920s a life down the mine, or in an occupation related to coal extraction, represented a fairly straightforward and often predetermined (and much shorter) transition from school to work by contemporary standards.
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It would be wrong to romanticise the dangerous working conditions of many miners (see Arnold, 2016), or to deny the continuous presence of class struggle and fluctuations in coalmining employment throughout the 20th century, but the point is that access to well-paid, secure employment was a
This period was relatively short-lived, however, and the fortunes of the South Wales pit villages contrast sharply with the dominant perception of the post-war period up to the late-1970s as the ‘golden era’ of social progress. Indeed, the decline of the coal industry accelerated in the 1960s alongside changes in the international coal market and the discovery of North Sea gas, which meant that the Valleys coal industry came to serve a mainly domestic market (Curtis, 2013). The industrial production of the Valleys was by now disconnected from global flows, which resulted in a shrinkage of the coal sector and those employed within it, but was still central to the national economy. By 1970, just 52 collieries employing only 40,000 people remained in South Wales (Curtis, 2013: 78). However, those
The subsequent and often brutal shift to a financialised and services-led model of economic growth since the 1980s (Sassen, 2014) has meant that places like the Valleys have experienced a rapid slide down the hierarchy of social positions. In our case, this is reinforced by challenging terrain, relative isolation and weak job creation (see Winkler, 2017), which contrasts with the pervasive logic and promotion of economic boosterism, agglomeration and commodification that have come to dominate urban growth agendas (Aalbers, 2016; Haughton et al., 2016). As Beatty et al. (2019: 21) note, The former coalfields are part of complex networks of commuting…But a low job density can also be a symptom of a weak local economy. This is perhaps clearest in the case of the South Wales coalfield, where there are just 42 jobs for every 100 residents of working age. The South Wales coalfield, in the Valleys, is a major area in its own right and although there are substantial commuting flows to Cardiff, Swansea and Newport on the coast it is hard to escape the conclusion that one of the reasons so many people travel out of the area for work is that there are so few jobs in the Valleys themselves.
The labour market detachment and decline in economic activity in the Welsh Valleys since the late 1960s onwards was mitigated (see Table 1), at least to
Territorial stigmatisation and landscapes of post-industrial ruination
There can be few places in the UK where the effects of the fragmentation and de-socialisation of waged labour have been as profound as that of former one-industry locales, such as coalfields, steel towns or shipbuilding communities. The isolated ‘pit villages’ of the Welsh Valleys were indelibly shaped by their relationship to the extraction of coal and the strong relations and solidarities produced by a bounded, one-industry community with social life monopolised by the institutions connected to that industry. Here Kerr and Siegel (1954, cited in Curtis, 2013) characterised mining communities as: …isolated masses, almost a ‘race apart’. They live in their own separate communities [with]…their own codes, myths, heroes, and social standards…the union becomes a kind of working-class party or even government for these employees, rather than just another association among many (Curtis, 2013: 18)
The extraction of coal also drove the social organisation of pit villages with the South Wales National Union of Miners (and the South Wales Mining Federation before it) ‘…a central institution in the day-to-day lives of its members’ (Curtis, 2013: 12) leading the welfare movement but also fostering, perpetuating and maintaining local traditions through recreation, culture and education centred on Miners’ Welfare Halls (or Institutes). Furthermore, recurrent class conflicts with coal mine owners, both private and nationalised, reinforced collective identifications and solidarities – South Wales being arguably the most militant of coalfield union movements. 5
The dominance of coal in the landscape and the organisation and unionisation of the community produced a distinct ‘institutional parallelism’ (Wacquant, 2004a) reflective of local pride, tradition and collective class consciousness, but also influenced by international political events, not least Marxism (Curtis, 2013). The Miners’ Welfare Halls were key sites and institutions of socialisation, education and interaction that reinforced strong group identifications of labour, proximity and place. They were the ‘…organisational and geographic centre of an infrastructure of industrial welfare, and a space where sociality across genders and generations took place’ (Emery, 2020b: 3). Here Emery details how the decline of such social institutions remains inscribed in the post-industrial landscape as sites of ruination. The Maerdy Welfare Hall,
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at the head of the Rhondda Fach Valley, is a case in point. Once celebrated as a top performance venue that hosted famous acts such as Billy Fury and Tom Jones, an educational hub and an anchor in the civic and cultural life of Maerdy village, the Hall ran into disrepair as deindustrialisation deepened. In 2002, the decision was taken to demolish the building given the £6 m of repair and restoration work required. Councillor Kevin Williams, Vice-Chair of Maerdy Communities First Partnership, is reported in the Maerdy newsletter as stating: ‘The Hall has played an important and historic role in the life of this community. Sadly though, it has now
These deindustrialising transformations to the social fabric, driven by the erosion of sites of socialisation where collective identifications are forged and perpetuated through the generations, disrupt the pattern and rhythm of gatherings and sociability. This not only impinges upon social life and internal solidarity within the Valleys but industrial ruination is also central to a reconfigured imaginary of the relation of the Valleys to the globalised, national and (city-)regional economies. The physical isolation, deindustrialisation and
Similarly, value is also extracted from the Valleys in the symbolic sense (Skeggs, 2004). TV shows like Social agents, but also things as they are appropriated by agents and thus constituted as properties, are situated in a location in social space that can be characterised by its position relative to other locations (as standing above, below or in-between them) and by the distance that separates them (Bourdieu, 2018: 106)
This social space of positions is also dependent on the symbolic representation, in turn, informed by the physical space, landscape, infrastructure and the built environment. The interdependence between social, physical and symbolic space is encapsulated in Figure 2. Here the train routes of South Wales are represented alongside travel information provided by Arriva Trains Wales. 8 The bottom right informs of a targeted alcohol ban policy along the different Valleys routes: from Pontypridd to Treherbert, Aberdare and Merthyr; and from Caerphilly to Rhymney. The map stands as a physical and digital artefact of territorial stigmatisation that captures the translation of the symbolic denigration of the Upper Valley communities into material actions and codified regulations. Residents living along those routes are assumed problematic and lacking self-restraint. As Bev Skeggs neatly puts it: ‘The representations of excess and waste point to bodies that cannot be normalised or disciplined…by representing the working class as excess and waste, their incorporation cannot be guaranteed: they are positioned as that which both represents and resists moral governance’ (Skeggs, 2004: 104).

Codifying stigma of the valleys.
This shifting position of the Valleys alongside a landscape of industrial ruination informs external expectations on conduct and the blemish of place attached to inhabitants – the symbolic logics of territorial stigmatisation – but it also impinges upon subjectivities, internal solidarities and habitus formation. A longer-term sensibility is therefore imperative in grasping how everyday sociability was inherently shaped by the industrial order (Emery, 2018), and how its relatively sudden collapse constituted a generational break in the sociological sense (Abrams, 1982). It is difficult to over-emphasise the shock of this process and its ongoing impacts (see Beatty and Fothergill, 2017; May et al., 2020).
Lagged habitus, collective identifications and intergenerational transfer
The preceding discussion sketched out some of the complex relations and interdependencies that have determined the changing position of the Valleys within different figurations of local, regional, national and international space. Yet such complex processes, trends, counter-trends and the changing power relations that shape them are often reduced to a notion of structural change (focused narrowly on economic shifts), which then often leads to questions of human agency. Drawing on a dynamic conceptualisation of habitus enables the sidestepping of this longstanding agency/structure impasse and the avoidance of the reification of social structures. This redirects attention toward the question of how social habitus adapts (or not) in order to meet the specific physical and social needs within changing social, cultural and historical conditions (Baur and Ernst, 2011).
The undermining of the social fabric wrought by the collapse of coal, and the institutional abandonment of coalfield communities, precipitated a trauma of industrial ruination related to a ‘lagged habitus’ (Elias, 2001), in turn, reinforced by a landscape of dilapidation and decline (see Emery, 2018). In this sense ‘social space is inscribed both in the objectivity of spatial structures and in the subjectivity of mental structures, which are in part the product of the embodiment of these objectified structures’ (Bourdieu, 2018: 108). As Degnen (2016: 1663) notes ‘one's history and those of others become
Just as upward social mobility can produce a fragmented habitus that can be difficult to reconcile for individuals seemingly caught betwixt and between (Hoggart, 1957; Friedman, 2016), so too can a (fairly rapid)
Yet deindustrialisation in the Valleys in the 1980s marked a generational break in the
Affordances: Integrating landscapes of industrial ruination
The concept of affordances was proposed by the ecological psychologist James Gibson (1979) as a means of articulating the way in which action and perception are constitutive of relations between organisms and their environments. From the starting point that affordances are environmental attributes that carry meaning, the debate has raged in ecological psychology as to ‘…what qualities shared between animals and environments constitute affordances and whether they can be considered to exist in the absence of animals’ (Gillings, 2012: 605). One view is that affordances are ‘out there’ in the environment and available for animals to exploit. In this sense, affordances do not depend on animals being present in order to exist. The opposing view is that affordances are only brought into being when certain conditions permit, reflecting how properties in the same environment are only revealed in the presence of an animal (Gillings, 2012: 605). In seeking to navigate a path to connect these seemingly contradictory positions, Chemero (2003) contended that affordances are only constituted through the
Taking a relational view of affordances opens up the possibility of recognising the rich ‘landscape of affordances’ on offer to humans in a given context (Rietveld and Kiverstein, 2014). For Rietveld and Kiverstein (2014), an individual affordance is constituted within a complex and multi-layered mosaic of affordances that are embedded in a network of interrelated socio-cultural practices and communal norms – what Rietveld and Kiverstein term a ‘form of life’. Adopting such a relational view provides a means of connecting affordances to habitus where the latter is also rooted in a rejection of dichotomous thinking and demands a relational understanding of the way in which human orientations are shaped (Bourdieu and Wacquant 1992). For Fayard and Weeks (2014: 238), the ‘concept of affordances allows us to understand how the social and physical construction of technology and the material environment shape practice. On the other hand, the concept of habitus allows us to understand how social and symbolic structures shape practice’. Here Tilley's conception of physical landscapes as ‘…relationally constituted as embedded sets of space-time relations’ (Tilley, 2010: 39) offers an entry point for the remainder of this section. In what follows, we contend that territorial stigmatisation, as applied to the Welsh Valleys, provides an analytical focus with which to bring the concepts of habitus and affordances together and contribute to debates on deindustrialisation as an ongoing relational process.
Against the framing offered above, we understand affordances as a Whether as barrier, chronic illness or pain, or debilitation or lack of access to resources due to structural inequalities, disability, I propose, can be defined ecologically as a
This work is valuable in offering a sociological move in the understanding of affordances and a shift from individualised readings to social interdependencies and collectives.
In the case of the Valleys, coal remains within the subterranean landscape of the pits, but the social constraints on past affordances tied to scientific knowledge and environmental developments, as well as socio-political relations, prevent (or at least limit) its extraction. The relative physical isolation and terrain of the Valleys, which reinforces internal solidarity and collective identifications, also represent an external constraint (barrier to affordances) accentuated by longstanding deficiencies in infrastructure and investment (see Scully, 2017; Winkler, 2017). The affordances of the landscape are impinged upon by changes within social space and the space of positions. The key point is that what is transmitted through ecological inheritance, the material consequences, are not just the structures (buildings, tools, or non-culturally informed environmental elements), but also the social functions of those structures together with the behavioural strategies that help us deal with them, and affordances are key for explaining those strategies. These behavioural strategies are inherited through social mediation, in which the community or social environment teaches its members what to do or what to attend to. This is why the function of the structure is maintained within and between generations (Heras-Escribano and De Pinedo-Garcia, 2018: 11)
The ‘social functions of those structures’ in the Valleys became obsolete and dilapidated in some cases, symbolised in the industrial ruination of the miners’ welfare halls (Emery, 2020b). The ‘behavioural strategies that help us deal with them’ are disrupted by the shock of rapid deindustrialisation meaning an ill-equipped habitus that moves slower than changes in social conditions tending towards emotional problems that manifest as nostalgia, shame and trauma. ‘Affordances are key for explaining those strategies’ to the extent that the isolation and terrain combine with territorial stigmatisation in curtailing them. These strategies ‘inherited by social mediation’ are also ruptured by the abandonment, institutional desertification, and erosion of key sites of socialisation tied to coal. In this sense ‘the function of the structure’ within the Valleys is
Deindustrialisation in the Valleys involves economic, social, material and physical detachments as a defining characteristic in terms of a decrease and de-densification of webs of interdependence manifest in the social, physical and symbolic spaces of the Valleys coalfields. Following Dokumachi (2020) these ruptures can be defined not only as a shrinking and shortening of webs of interdependencies and materialities, but also of available affordances. Coal is the epitome of a
In our view, bringing habitus into conversation with affordances opens up the potential for providing for a fuller register of Wacquant's triad of social, symbolic and physical space in foregrounding the neglected significance of place and physical landscape in understandings of territorial stigmatisation.
Conclusions
The preoccupation with the symbolic within accounts of territorial stigmatisation (Watt, 2020) has meant a preference for specific methodological approaches that expose misrepresentations of working-class communities, trace the attribution of stigma related to stereotypes and clichés, and seek to connect discourses and perceptions to ill-informed urban policy (Larsen and Delica, 2019; Nayak, 2019). This body of literature has made a valuable contribution to our understanding of the relational making of urban marginality within the polarised metropolises of the 21st century. But there has been a relative neglect of non-urban environments as well as the
The trajectory of the Valleys supports the notion of the fragmentation of wage labour as a ‘master trend’ (Wacquant 2019), but it also shows how these traumas are written into the landscape and built environment and impinge upon subsequent generations (Emery, 2020b; Mah, 2012). We have made the case for more attention to the integration of the physical and material in understanding these shifts. This can nuance our understanding of the
