Uses of Heritage
Material type:
TextPublication details: New York Routledge 2006Description: 368pISBN: 9780415318310Subject(s): ConservationDDC classification: 720.288 | Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book
|
Non-fiction | 720.288/SMI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 8522 |
Browsing Kamla Raheja Vidyanidhi Institute for Architecture and Environmental Studies shelves, Collection: Non-fiction Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
|
|
|
|
|
|
No cover image available | ||
| 720.288/SIN Conserving the Spirit of a Historic Garden | 720.288/SLA Interpreting Heritage: A Guide to Planning and Practice | 720.288/SMI Heritage Values in Contemporary Society | 720.288/SMI Uses of Heritage | 720.288/SOU South Asian Archaeology | 720.288/STI The Project of Independence: Architectures of Decolonization in South Asia, 1947–1985 | 720.288/STO Stone Cleaning of Heritage Buildings in Mumbai: A Handbook |
Introductionp.1, PART – I: The idea of heritage p.9, 1. The discourse of heritage p.11, There is no such thing as 'heritage' p.13, When was heritage? p.16, The autborized heritage discourse and its use p.29, Subaltern and dissenting heritage discourses p.35, Conclusion p.42, 2. Heritage as a cultural process p.44, Heritage as experience p.45, Heritage as identity p.48, The intangibility of heritage p.53, Memory and remembering p.57, Heritage as performance p.66, Place p.74, Dissonance p.80, Conclusion p.82, PART – II: Authorized heritage p.85, 3. Authorizing institutions of heritage p.87, Venice Charter p.88, World Heritage Convention p.95, Burra Charter p.102, Intangible heritage p.106 Conclusion p.113, 4. The 'manored' past: The banality of grandiloquence p.115, The country house as authorized heritage p.117, Knowing your place: Performing identities at the country house p.129, Conclusion p.158, 5. Fellas, fossils and country: The Riversleigh landscape p.162, Riversleigh World Heritage Site p.163, The Australian landscape as autborized cultural heritage p.168, The Riversleigh sense of place p.173, Conclusion p.191, PART – III: Responses to authorized heritage p.193, 6. Labour heritage: Performing and remembering p.195, Museums and heritage p.197, ‘Better rememberings from here': Remembering and the negotiation of social meaning and identity p.207, Conclusion p.234, 7. The slate wiped clean? Heritage, memory and landscape in Castleford, West Yorkshire, England p.237, History and place p.240, 'But Miss, what's the black lump?' Memory and heritage in Castleford p.247, Performance, remembering and commemoration: Heritage as community networking p.265, Conclusion p.272, 8."The issue is control': Indigenous politics and the discourse of heritage p.276, The history of Indigenous critique - or why the control of heritage matters p.277, Cultural differences and discursive barriers p.283


Book
There are no comments on this title.