1. Ruin Porn and the Anthropocene (Siobhan Lyons)
2. Detroit Was Always Made of Wheels: Confronting Ruin Porn in its Hometown (Kate Wells)
3. Gods and Monsters: A Solastalgic Examination of Detroit’s Ruins and Representation (Christopher T. Gullen)
4. The Bronx Isn’t Burning, Is It?: Ruin Porn and Contemporary Perceptions of The Bronx (Joseph Donica)
5. “Take Nothing but Photos, Leave Nothing but Footprints”: How-to Guides for Ruin Photography (Susan A. Crane)
6. Where the (Moving) Sidewalk Ends: Images of Wasted Americana in the Preapocalyptic World (Amanda Firestone, Stephen Crompton and Corey George)
7. Picturing Ruin in the American Rustbelt: Andrew Borowiec’s Cleveland: The Flats, the Mill, and the Hills (2008) (Susann Köhler)
8. Diachronic Fetishisation: Ruin Porn and Pitcairn Island Language, Archaeology, and Architecture (Joshua Nash and Martin Gibbs)
9. No Vacancy: History and Meaning of Contemporary Ruins in a Regional Australian City(Nancy Cushing, Michael Kilmister, and Nathan Scott)
10. Immersive Ruin: Chernobyl and Virtual Decay (Michelle Bentley)
11. More than Ruins: (Post-)Apocalyptic Places in Film (Felix Kirschbacher)
12. ‘This is not ruin tourism’: Social Media and the Quest for Authenticity in Urban Exploration (André Jansson).