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Cultural Heritage Management in Africa The Heritage of the Colonized

Cultural Heritage Management in Africa The Heritage of the Colonized

Cultural Heritage Management in Africa explores the diversity of Africa’s cultural heritage by analysing how and why this heritage has been managed and by considering the factors that continue to influence management strategies and systems throughout the African continent. Including contributions from prominent scholars and heritage professionals working across Africa the volume presents critical contemporary perspectives on the state of heritage in the area. Chapters analyse the practices that emanated from different colonial experiences and consider what impact these had – and continue to have – on the management of African heritage. It also critically examines the ideological influence of independence movements on the African continent’s management and remembering of heritage and considers whether there are any differences in heritage management between countries that experienced armed conflicts and those that did not. The volume will be the first to critically assess the state of heritage management now at a time when vital conversations about the balance between heritage and development is ongoing and the actions of new players have begun to impact the management and practice of heritage in the region. Cultural Heritage Management in Africa will be essential reading for those engaged in the study of museums and heritage development archaeology anthropology history and African studies. It will also be of interest to heritage and museum professionals who wish to learn more about the decolonisation of heritage. | Cultural Heritage Management in Africa The Heritage of the Colonized

GBP 34.99
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Heritage Ecologies

Emotional Heritage Visitor Engagement at Museums and Heritage Sites

Emotional Heritage Visitor Engagement at Museums and Heritage Sites

Emotional Heritage brings the issues of affect and power in the theorisation of heritage to the fore whilst also highlighting the affective and political consequences of heritage-making. Drawing on interviews with visitors to museums and heritage sites in the United States Australia and England Smith argues that obtaining insights into how visitors use such sites enables us to understand the impact and consequences of professional heritage and museological practices. The concept of registers of engagement is introduced to assess variations in how visitors use museums and sites that address national or dissonant histories and the political consequences of their use. Visitors are revealed as agents in the roles cultural institutions play in maintaining or challenging the political and social status quo. Heritage is Smith argues about people and their social situatedness and the meaning they alongside or in concert with cultural institutions make and mobilise to help them address social problems and expressions of identity and sense of place in and for the present. Academics students and practitioners interested in theories of power and affect in museums and heritage sites will find Emotional Heritage to be an invaluable resource. Helping professionals to understand the potential impact of their practice the book also provides insights into the role visitors play in the interplay between heritage and politics. | Emotional Heritage Visitor Engagement at Museums and Heritage Sites

GBP 36.99
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Creating Heritage for Tourism

Growing Heritage The Politics of Heritage Vegetables Fruit and Seeds in Britain

Growing Heritage The Politics of Heritage Vegetables Fruit and Seeds in Britain

This book is the first comprehensive critical analysis of the cultural politics of a new kind of British heritage discourse. Based on texts ranging from tweets to restaurant menus that tell the story of heritage vegetables this book explores what it means to think about our food systems and their future through the lens of ‘heritage’. From town hall seed swaps to restaurant menus and coffee table books it has become hard in recent years for consumers to avoid the idea of ‘heritage’ fruit and vegetables. The British counterpart of North American heirlooms their varied colours strange shapes and endearing names are charming. Yet their proponents claim far more for them arguing it is vital that we safeguard our crop heritage for global food security social justice and consumer choice. This book examines how heritage fruits and vegetables are adopted to subvert corporate food production and take food back into our own hands while supermarkets are eagerly adding them to their luxury ranges. The book also discusses the practice of heritage seeds being stored in secure facilities where most of the world’s growers cannot reach them. Written in an accessible style this book will appeal to those studying and those interested in food studies and food politics; heritage studies; geography and environmental studies; the sociology of consumption and cultural studies. | Growing Heritage The Politics of Heritage Vegetables Fruit and Seeds in Britain

GBP 38.99
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Cultural Heritage Rights

Industrial Heritage and Regional Identities

Industrial Heritage and Regional Identities

Heritage is not what we see in front of us it is what we make of it in our heads. Heritage sites have been connected to a range of identarian projects both spatial and non-spatial. One of the most common links with heritage has been national identity. This book stresses that heritage has developed powerful links to regional and local identities. Contributors deal explicitly with regions of heavy industry in different parts of the world exploring non-spatial forms of identity: including class religious ethnic racial gender and cultural identities. In many heritage sites non-spatial forms of identity are interlinked with spatial ones. Civil society action has been important in representations of regional identities and industrial-heritage campaigns. Region-branding seems to determine the ultimate success of industrial heritage a process that is closely connected to the marketing of regions to provide a viable economic future and attract tourism to the region. Selected case-studies on coal and steel producing regions in this book provide the first global survey of how regions of heavy industry deal with their industrial heritage and what it means for regional identity and region-branding. This book draws a range of powerful conclusions about the path dependency of particular forms for post-industrial regional identity in former regions of heavy industry. It highlights both commonalities and differences in the strategies employed with regard to the regions’ industrial heritage. This book will appeal to lecturers students and scholars in the fields of heritage management industrial studies and cultural geography. | Industrial Heritage and Regional Identities

GBP 38.99
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Managing Disaster Risks to Cultural Heritage From Risk Preparedness to Recovery for Immovable Heritage

Managing Disaster Risks to Cultural Heritage From Risk Preparedness to Recovery for Immovable Heritage

Managing Disaster Risks to Cultural Heritage presents case studies from different regions in the world and establishes a framework for understanding identifying and analysing disaster risks to immovable cultural heritage. Featuring contributions from academics and practitioners from around the globe the book presents a comprehensive view of the scholarship relating to cultural heritage disaster risk preparedness and post-disaster recovery. Particular attention is given to the complex and dynamic nature of disaster risks and how they evolve during different phases of a catastrophic event especially as hazards can create secondary effects that have greater impacts on cultural heritage infrastructure and economy. Arguing that risk preparedness and mitigation have historically been secondary to reactive emergency and first aid response the book demonstrates that preparedness plans based on sound risk assessments can prevent hazards from becoming disasters. Emphasising that the protection of cultural heritage through preparedness mitigation actions and risk adaptation measures – especially for climate change – can contribute to the resilience of societies the book highlights the vital role of communities in such activities. Managing Disaster Risks to Cultural Heritage will be useful to students professionals and scholars studying and working with cultural heritage protection. It will be of particular interest to those working in the fields of Cultural Heritage Archaeology Conservation and Preservation Sustainable Development and Disaster Studies. | Managing Disaster Risks to Cultural Heritage From Risk Preparedness to Recovery for Immovable Heritage

GBP 35.99
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Toxic Heritage Legacies Futures and Environmental Injustice

Sacred Heritage in Japan

Constructing Destruction Heritage Narratives in the Tsunami City

Heritage after Conflict Northern Ireland

Heritage after Conflict Northern Ireland

The year 2018 marks the twentieth anniversary of the signing of the Belfast Agreement that initiated an uneasy peace in Northern Ireland after the forty years of the Troubles. The last twenty years however has still not been sufficient time to satisfactorily resolve the issue of how to deal with the events of the conflict and the dissonant heritages that both gave rise to it and were in turn fuelled by it. With contributions from across the UK and Europe Heritage after Conflict brings together a range of expertise to examine the work to which heritage is currently being put within Northern Ireland. Questions about the contemporary application of remembering infiltrate every aspect of heritage studies including built heritages urban regeneration and planning tourism museum provision and intangible cultural heritages. These represent challenges for heritage professionals who must carefully consider how they might curate and conserve dissonant heritages without exacerbating political tensions that might spark violence. Through a lens of critical heritage studies contributors to this book locate their work within the wider contexts of post-conflict societies divided cities and dissonant heritages. Heritage after Conflict should be essential reading for academics researchers and postgraduate students engaged in the study of the social sciences history peace studies economics cultural geography museum heritage and cultural policy and the creative arts. It should also be of great interest to heritage professionals. | Heritage after Conflict Northern Ireland

GBP 38.99
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Conflict Cultural Heritage and Peace An Introductory Guide

Conflict Cultural Heritage and Peace An Introductory Guide

Conflict Cultural Heritage and Peace offers a series of conceptual and applied frameworks to help understand the role cultural heritage plays within conflict and the potential it has to contribute to positive peacebuilding and sustainable development in post-conflict societies. Designed as a resource guide this general volume introduces the multiple roles cultural heritage plays through the conflict cycle from its onset subsequent escalation and through to resolution and recovery. In its broadest sense it questions what role cultural heritage plays within conflict how cultural heritage is used in the construction and justification of conflict narratives how are these narratives framed and often manipulated to support particular perspectives and how we can develop better understandings of cultural heritage and work towards the better protection of cultural heritage resources during conflict. It moves beyond the protection paradigm and recognises that cultural heritage can contribute to building peace and reconciliation in post-conflict environments. The study offers a conceptual and operational framework to understand the roles cultural heritage plays within conflict cycles how it can be targeted during war and the potential cultural heritage has in positive peacebuilding across the conflict lifecycle. Conflict Cultural Heritage and Peace offers an invaluable introduction to cultural heritage at all stages in conflict scenarios which will benefit students researchers and practitioners in the field of heritage environment peace and conflict studies. | Conflict Cultural Heritage and Peace An Introductory Guide

GBP 35.99
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Heritage Planning Principles and Process

Sociology of World Heritage An Asian Perspective

Landscape as Heritage International Critical Perspectives

The Routledge Handbook of Spanish as a Heritage Language

Heritage Indigenous Doing and Wellbeing Voices of Country

Heritage Indigenous Doing and Wellbeing Voices of Country

Heritage Indigenous Doing and Wellbeing presents an Aboriginal Australian relational understanding of the world that offers a counter-narrative to the Western notion of heritage and new insights into the potential for sustaining the complex systems that support all life. From an Indigenous Australian perspective the Western concept of heritage is intentionally exclusionary and supports social political economic and environmental injustice. Aboriginal People engage with landscape every day in entirely different ways seeing Country as a living ‘heritage’ but in a unique relationship form that engages the individual with place ancestors language and wellbeing. However Country is most often relegated by heritage proponents to ‘intangible heritage’ and this results in the concept having little legislative legal or administrative weight. Drawing on a common understanding of Country as sacred living and sentient rather than as objectified property or resource the contributors to this book explore a diversity of relationships with Country that demonstrate the richness and the practical utility of this relational understanding. Heritage Indigenous Doing and Wellbeing foregrounds the voices of Australian Aboriginal People who are involved in ‘Caring for Country’. It will be an essential resource for those engaged in the study of Country heritage museums Indigenous Peoples landscape architecture environmental studies planning and archaeology. It will also be of great interest to heritage practitioners working around the globe. | Heritage Indigenous Doing and Wellbeing Voices of Country

GBP 35.99
1

Contemporary Art in Heritage Spaces

Contemporary Art in Heritage Spaces

Contemporary Art in Heritage Spaces considers the challenges that accompany an assessment of the role of contemporary art in heritage contexts whilst also examining ways to measure and articulate the impact and value of these intersections in the future. Presenting a variety of perspectives from a broad range of creative and cultural industries this book examines case studies from the past decade where contemporary art has been sited within heritage spaces. Exploring the impact of these instances of intersection and the thinking behind such moments of confluence it provides an insight into a breadth of experiences – from curator producer and practitioner to visitor – of exhibitions where this juncture between contemporary art and heritage plays a crucial and critical role. Themes covered in the book include interpretation soliciting and measuring audience responses tourism and the visitor economy regeneration agendas heritage research marginalised histories and the legacy of exhibitions. Contemporary Art in Heritage Spaces will be essential reading for academics and students engaged in the study of museum and heritage studies and contemporary art around the globe. Museum practitioners and artists should also find much to interest them within the pages of this volume. Chapter 9 of this book is available for free in PDF format as Open Access from the individual product page at www. routledge. com. It has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4. 0 license

GBP 38.99
1

Practitioner Perspectives on Intangible Cultural Heritage

Practitioner Perspectives on Intangible Cultural Heritage

Practitioner Perspectives on Intangible Cultural Heritage provides an accessible introduction to the Intangible Cultural Heritage field. Summarising the major changes that have taken place over the last two decades the book explores ongoing debates and changes in thinking about best practice. Drawing on the author’s own experience of operationalising the UNESCO 2003 Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage in a variety of contexts Orr also incorporates international case studies from practitioners and provides valuable insights about best practices. Demonstrating that the top-down state-driven hierarchy for the safeguarding of heritage is starting to shift to a model of shared ownership and values driven by communities and practitioners the book shows that the notion of the ‘expert’ is also diversifying to include other forms of transmission of traditional knowledge. Orr argues that these different perspectives provide a platform to enrich understanding and knowledge and create a stronger basis for the safeguarding of heritage - both intangible and tangible. Exploring some of the policy developments that have laid the foundations for the future involvement of community and practitioners in the global discourse the book also suggests how practitioners can expand networks and contribute to the global discourse. Practitioner Perspectives on Intangible Cultural Heritage will appeal to museum curators and other heritage professionals as well as students and academics engaged in the study of museums and heritage art and cultural policy and management.

GBP 31.99
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Intangible Heritage and Participation Encounters with Safeguarding Practices

Intangible Heritage and Participation Encounters with Safeguarding Practices

Intangible Heritage and Participation examines participation as an intellectual and operational frame in safeguarding intangible heritage. Including case studies from the Netherlands Belgium Aotearoa New Zealand Greece Peru Britain Denmark Sweden and Japan the book provides an analysis of safeguarding as a museological framework and further investigates safeguarding practices in participatory research memory-work and cultural transmission. Drawing on conversations about ‘the tyranny of participation’ the book looks into the complexities of participatory projects on the ground from community research and collecting to the mapping of Indigenous values in environmental conservation and processes of active remembering of ‘difficult intangible heritage’ of forced migration political violence and mental illness. Cautioning against the uncritical adoption of participation as a universal ethical discourse Alivizatou argues that the ethics of cosmopolitanism should guide safeguarding practices at an international level. Intangible Heritage and Participation offers an original approach to thinking about and working with intangible heritage and as such should be essential reading for academics researchers and students in among others the fields of cultural heritage studies museology anthropology and cultural development. It should also be of interest to heritage and museum professionals and anyone else interested in cultural heritage theory and practice. | Intangible Heritage and Participation Encounters with Safeguarding Practices

GBP 35.99
1

Counterheritage Critical Perspectives on Heritage Conservation in Asia

Counterheritage Critical Perspectives on Heritage Conservation in Asia

The claim that heritage practice in Asia is Eurocentric may be well-founded but the view that local people in Asia need to be educated by heritage practitioners and governments to properly conserve their heritage distracts from the responsibility of educating oneself about the local-popular beliefs and practices which constitute the bedrock of most people’s engagement with the material past. Written by an archaeologist who has long had one foot in the field of heritage practice and another in the academic camp of archaeology and heritage studies Counterheritage is at once a forthright critique of current heritage practice in the Asian arena and a contribution to this project of self-education. Popular religion in Asia – including popular Buddhism and Islam folk Catholicism and Chinese deity cults – has a constituency that accounts for a majority of Asia’s population making its exclusion from heritage processes an issue of social justice but more pragmatically it explains why many heritage conservation programs fail to gain local traction. This book describes how the tenets of popular religion affect building and renovation practices and describes how modernist attempts to suppress popular religion in Asia in the early and mid-twentieth century impacted religious ‘heritage. ’ Author Denis Byrne argues that the campaign by archaeologists and heritage professionals against the private collecting and ‘looting’ of antiquities in Asia largely ignores the regimes of value which heritage discourse has helped erect and into which collectors and local diggers play. Focussing on the Philippines Thailand and Taiwan but also referencing China and other parts of Southeast Asia richly detailed portraits are provided of the way people live with ‘old things’ and are affected by them. Narratives of the author’s fieldwork are woven into arguments built upon an extensive and penetrating reading of the historical and anthropological literature. The critical stance embodied in the title ‘counterheritage’ is balanced by the optimism of the book’s vision of a different practice of heritage advocating a view of heritage objects as vibrant agentic things enfolded in social practice rather than as inert and passive surfaces subject to conservation. | Counterheritage Critical Perspectives on Heritage Conservation in Asia

GBP 39.99
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Urban Heritage in Divided Cities Contested Pasts

Urban Heritage in Divided Cities Contested Pasts

Urban Heritage in Divided Cities explores the role of contested urban heritage in mediating subverting and overcoming sociopolitical conflict in divided cities. Investigating various examples of transformations of urban heritage around the world the book analyses the spatial social and political causes behind them as well as the consequences for the division and reunification of cities during both wartime and peacetime conflicts. Contributors to the volume define urban heritage in a broad sense as tangible elements of the city such as ruins remains of border architecture traces of violence in public space and memorials as well as intangible elements like urban voids everyday rituals place names and other forms of spatial discourse. Addressing both historic and contemporary cases from a wide range of academic disciplines contributors to the book investigate the role of urban heritage in divided cities in Africa Asia the Americas Europe and the Middle East. Shifting focus from the notion of urban heritage as a fixed and static legacy of the past the volume demonstrates that the concept is a dynamic and transformable entity that plays an active role in inquiring critiquing subverting and transforming the present. Urban Heritage in Divided Cities will be of great interest to academics researchers and students in the fields of cultural studies sociology the political sciences history human geography urban design and planning architecture archaeology ethnology and anthropology. The book should also be essential reading for professionals who are involved in governing planning designing and transforming urban heritage around the world. | Urban Heritage in Divided Cities Contested Pasts

GBP 36.99
1

Spanish Heritage Learners' Emerging Literacy Empirical Research and Classroom Practice