Produktbild: Oxford Handbook of Public Heritage Theory and Practice

Oxford Handbook of Public Heritage Theory and Practice

238,99 €

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

08.08.2018

Herausgeber

Angela M. Labrador + weitere

Verlag

Oxford University Press

Seitenzahl

472

Maße (L/B/H)

25/17,5/3 cm

Gewicht

939 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-067631-5

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

08.08.2018

Herausgeber

Verlag

Oxford University Press

Seitenzahl

472

Maße (L/B/H)

25/17,5/3 cm

Gewicht

939 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-067631-5

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  • Produktbild: Oxford Handbook of Public Heritage Theory and Practice
    • About the Editors

    • List of Contributors

    • Introduction

    • Public Heritage as Social Practice

    • Angela M. Labrador and Neil Asher Silberman

    • Part I: Heritage, Development, and Global Relations

    • 1.1 Creating Universal Value: The UNESCO World Heritage Convention in Its Fifth Decade

    • Christoph Brumann

    • 1.2 The Suffocated Cultural Heritage of Sub-Saharan Africa's Protected Areas

    • Susan O. Keitumetse and Arpakwa O. Sikorei

    • 1.3 Sustainable Conservation of Urban Heritage: The Contribution of Governance-Focused Studies

    • Eduardo Rojas

    • 1.4 Heritage and the Politics of Cooperation

    • Tim Winter

    • 1.5 Culture, Heritage, and the Politics of Becoming

    • Joanie Willett

    • Part II: Heritage, Markets, and Management

    • 2.1 Problematizing the Idea of Heritage Management

    • Marina Dantas de Figueiredo

    • 2.2 Heritage and Management, Professional Utopianism, Administrative Naiveté, and Organizational Uncertainty at the Shipwrecks of Pisa

    • Luca Zan and Daniel Shoup

    • 2.3 Accounting for What We Treasure: Economic Valuation of Public Heritage

    • Sheila Ellwood

    • 2.4 Cultural Heritage: Capital, Commons, and Heritages

    • Christian Barrère

    • 2.5 Heritage as Remaking: Locating Heritage in the Contemporary World

    • Scott A. Lukas

    • 2.6 Culturally Reflexive Stewardship: Conserving Ways of Life

    • Robert H. Winthrop

    • Part III: Heritage and the Use of Power

    • 3.1 Neoliberalism and the Equivocations of Empire

    • Jim McGuigan

    • 3.2 Public Heritage and the Promise of the Digital

    • Jenny Kidd

    • 3.3 On the Need for a Nuanced Understanding of "Community" in Heritage Policy and Practice

    • Martin Mulligan

    • 3.4 "What Could Be More Reasonable?" Collaboration in Colonial Contexts

    • Marina La Salle and Richard M. Hutchings

    • 3.5 The Special Responsibility of Public Spaces to Dismantle White Supremacist Historical Narratives

    • Karen L. B. Burgard and Michael L. Boucher, Jr.

    • 3.6 Public Heritage as Transformative Experience: The Co-occupation of Place and Decision-Making

    • David M. Schaepe

    • Part IV: Living with Change


    • 4.1 The Social Sciences: What Role in Conservation?

    • Ned Kaufman

    • 4.2 People in Place: Local Planning to Preserve Diverse Cultures

    • James Michael Buckley

    • 4.3 Heritage as an Element of the Scenescape

    • Martha Frish Okabe, Daniel Silver, and Terry Nichols Clark

    • 4.4 Contesting the Aesthetic Construction of Community: The New Suburban Landscape

    • Denise Lawrence-Zúñiga

    • 4.5 Agricultural Heritage and Conservation Beyond the Anthropocene

    • Daniel Niles

    • 4.6 Public Heritage in the Symbiocene

    • Glenn A. Albrecht

    • Part V: Heritage, Memory, and Well-Being

    • 5.1 Mapping Authenticity: Cognition and Emotion in Public Heritage

    • Steven J Mock

    • 5.2 Understanding Well-Being: A Mechanism for Measuring the Impact of Heritage Practice on Well-Being

    • Faye Sayer

    • 5.3 Effects of Conversations with Sites of Public Heritage on Collective Memory

    • Martin M. Fagin

    • 5.4 Intergenerational Learning: A Tool for Building and Transforming Cultural Heritage

    • Giulia Cortellesi, Jessica Harpley, and Margaret Kernan

    • Index