Cultural and natural heritage are central to ‘Europe’ and ‘the European project’. They were bound up in the emergence of nation-states in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, where they were used to justify differences over which border conflicts were fought. Later, the idea of a ‘common European heritage’ provided a rationale for the development of the European Union. Now, the emergence of ‘new’ populist nationalisms shows how the imagined past continues to play a role in cultural and social governance, while a series of interlinked social and ecological crises are changing the ways that heritage operates. New discourses and ontologies are emerging to reconfigure heritage for the circumstances of the present and the uncertainties of the future.
Taking the current role of heritage in Europe as its starting point, Critical Heritage Studies and the Futures of Europe presents a number of case studies that explore key themes in this transformation. Contributors draw on a range of disciplinary perspectives to consider, variously, the role of heritage and museums in the migration and climate ‘emergencies’; approaches to urban heritage conservation and practices of curating cities; digital and digitised heritage; the use of heritage as a therapeutic resource; and critical approaches to heritage and its management. Taken together, the chapters explore the multiple ontologies through which cultural and natural heritage have actively intervened in redrawing the futures of Europe and the world.
Format: Open Access PDF
387 Pages
51 colour illustrations and 6 B&W illustrations
ISBN: 9781800083936
Publication: October 24, 2023
List of figures
List of tables
Contributors
Preface and acknowledgementsIntroduction
Rodney Harrison Nélia Dias, and Kristian Kristiansen*Part I: Heritage and global challenges
Editors’ introduction to Part 1
1 Rethinking museums for the climate emergency
Rodney Harrison and Colin Sterling2 From climate victim to climate action: heritage as agent in climate change mitigation discourse
Janna oud Ammerveld3 Syrian refugees' food in Lisbon: a heritage of food beyond national borders
Marcela Jaramillo4 Relations with objects: a longitudinal case study
Katie O’DonoghuePart II: Curating the city: rethinking urban heritages
Editors’ introduction to Part 2
5 Erosion and preservation of the cultural and geological heritage in mega city landscapes of the Global South: A geo-aesthetic inquiry
Peter Krieger6 Recognising urban heritage written in water: Mapping fluctuating articulations in time and space
Moniek Driesse7 Participatory design in the context of heritage-development: Engaging with the past in the design space of historical landscapes
Mela Zuljevic8 The (over)touristification of European historic cities: a relation between urban heritage and short-term rental market demand
Łukasz Bugalski9 Overtourism vs pandemic: the fragility of our historic cities
Maria Pia GuermandiPart III: Digital heritages and digital futures
10 Datafied landscapes: Exploring digital maps as (critical) heritage
Stuart Dunn11 #Womenof1916 and the heritage of the Easter Rising on Twitter
Hannah K. Smyth12 The material and immaterial historic environment
William Illsley13 Digitality as a cultural policy instrument: Europeana and the Europeanisation of digital heritage
Carlotta Capurro14 De-neutralising digital heritage infrastructures? Critical considerations on digital engagements with the past in the context of Europe
Gertjan Plets, Julianne Nyhan, Andrew Flinn, Alexandra Ortolja-Baird and Jaap VerheulPart IV: Postcolonial legacies: ‘European’ heritages beyond Europe
Editors’ introduction to Part 4
15 Heritage pharmacology and ‘moving heritage’: Making refugees, asylum seekers and Palestine part of the European conscience
Beverley Butler and Fatima Al-Nammari16 How to tell the good guys from the bad guys…or not
Randall H McGuire17 Traumatic heritage, politics of visibility and the standardisation of plaques and memorials in the city of São Paulo, Brazil
Márcia Lika Hattori18 Lampedusa here and there: activating memories of migration in Amsterdam’s historic centre – a resource for whom?
Vittoria CaradonnaConcluding reflections
Afterword
Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett
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