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E-raamat: Displaced Heritage: Responses to Disaster, Trauma, and Loss

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  • Formaat: 359 pages
  • Sari: Heritage Matters
  • Ilmumisaeg: 18-Dec-2014
  • Kirjastus: The Boydell Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781782047186
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  • Formaat: 359 pages
  • Sari: Heritage Matters
  • Ilmumisaeg: 18-Dec-2014
  • Kirjastus: The Boydell Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781782047186

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Considerations of the effect of trauma on heritage sites.

The essays in this volume address the displacement of natural and cultural heritage caused by disasters, whether they be dramatic natural impacts or terrible events unleashed by humankind, including holocaust and genocide. Disasters can be natural or human-made, rapid or slow, great or small, yet the impact is effectively the same; nature, people and cultural heritage are displaced or lost. Yet while heritage and place are at risk from disasters, in time,sites of suffering are sometimes reframed as sites of memory; through this different lens these "difficult" places become heritage sites that attract tourists. Ranging widely chronologically and geographically, the contributors explore the impact of disasters, trauma and suffering on heritage and sense of place, in both theory and practice.

Contributors: Kai Erikson, Catherine Roberts, Philip R. Stone, Stephen Miles, Susannah Eckersley, Gerard Corsane, Graeme Were, Jo Besley, Tim Padley, Chia-Li Chen, Jonathan Skinner, Diana Walters, Shalini Sharma, Ellie Land, Rob Morley, Ian Convery, John Welshman, Aron Mazel, Andrew Law, Bryony Onciul, Sarah Elliott, Rebecca Whittle,Will Medd, Maggie Mort, Hugh Deeming, Marion Walker, Clare Twigger-Ross, Gordon Walker, Nigel Watson, Richard Johnson, Esther Edwards, James Gardner, Brij Mohan, Josephine Baxter, Takashi Harada, Arthur McIvor, Rupert Ashmore, Peter Lurz, Marc Ancrenaz, Isabelle Lackman, Özgün Emre Can, Bryndís Snæbjörnsdóttir, Mark Wilson, Pat Caplan, Billy Sinclar, Phil O'Keefe

Digital editions of this book are openly available under the Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND.

Arvustused

[ T]his remains a book which should be read by those with an interest in the social dimension of disasters, in how society responds in different ways to trauma and loss and how heritage can be repossessed, rebuilt and re-presented in novel ways, implicitly as part of a recovery process. The chapters present contemporary debates and practices based on equally contemporary cases and, given its eclectic content, all readers will find much of interest in the content. * INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HERITAGE STUDIES * Flicking through the index of this volume indicates just how perceptively compiled and thorough an understanding the editors have of it. We see the anticipated indexical content such as the names of places, animals and types of disasters but there are also terms which are explicitly cognisant of the breadth of intangibility involved in heritage interpretation.Displaced heritage is after all intangible and often needs to be unearthed from an assortment of different dimensions. * MUSEUM & SOCIETY *

List of Illustrations
viii
Acknowledgments xiii
List of Abbreviations
xiv
Preface xvii
Kai Erikson
Introduction 1(8)
Ian Convery
Gerard Corsane
Peter Davis
Displaced Heritage: Histories and Tourism
1 Dark Tourism and Dark Heritage: Emergent Themes, Issues and Consequences
9(10)
Catherine Roberts
Philip R. Stone
2 Anthropogenic Disaster and Sense of Place: Battlefield Sites as Tourist Attractions
19(10)
Stephen Miles
3 Memorialisation in Eastern Germany: Displacement, (Re)placement and Integration of Macro- and Micro-Heritage
29(12)
Susannah Eckersley
Gerard Corsane
4 Remembering the Queensland Floods: Community Collecting in the Wake of Natural Disaster
41(10)
Jo Besley
Graeme Were
5 Displaced Heritage and Family Histories: Could a Foreign Family's Heritage in China Become an Ecomuseum 'Hub' for Cultural Tourism Management?
51(12)
Gerard Esplin Corsane
6 Walls, Displacement and Heritage
63(8)
Tim Padley
7 Remembering Traumatic Events: The 921 Earthquake Education Park, Taiwan
71(14)
Chia-Li Chen
Displaced Heritage: Trauma, Confinement and Loss
8 Maze Breaks in Northern Ireland: Terrorism, Tourism and Storytelling in the Shadows of Modernity
85(10)
Jonathan Skinner
9 'We shall never forget, but cannot remain forever on the battlefield': Museums, Heritage and Peacebuilding in the Western Balkans
95(12)
Diana Walters
10 The Politics of Remembering Bhopal
107(14)
Shalini Sharma
11 Animating the Other Side: Animated Documentary as a Communication Tool for Exploring Displacement and Reunification in Germany
121(8)
Ellie Land
12 Restoring Gorongosa: Some Personal Reflections
129(14)
Rob Morley
Ian Convery
13 The Last Night of a Small Town: Child Narratives and the Titanic
143(8)
John Welshman
14 Troubled 'Homecoming': Journey to a Foreign yet Familiar Land
151(14)
Aron Mazel
Displaced Heritage: Lived Realities, Local Experiences
15 Humiliation Heritage in China: Discourse, Affectual Governance and Displaced Heritage at Tiananmen Square
165(10)
Andrew Law
16 Revitalising Blackfoot Heritage and Addressing Residential School Trauma
175(12)
Bryony Onciul
17 Reading Local Responses to Large Dams in South-east Turkey
187(12)
Sarah Elliott
18 Placing the Flood Recovery Process
199(8)
Rebecca Whittle
Will Medd
Maggie Mort
Hugh Deeming
Marion Walker
Clare Twigger-Ross
Gordon Walker
Nigel Watson
19 Village Heritage and Resilience in Damaging Floods and Debris Flows, Kullu Valley, Indian Himalaya
207(18)
Richard Johnson
Esther Edwards
James Gardner
Brij Mohan
20 Cultural Heritage and Animal Disease: The Watchtree Memorial Stone
225(10)
Josephine Baxter
21 Earthquakes: People, Landscape and Heritage in Japan
235(8)
Takashi Harada
22 Industrial Heritage and the Oral Legacy of Disaster: Narratives of Asbestos Disease Victims from Clydeside, Scotland
243(8)
Arthur McIvor
23 Translating Foot and Mouth: Conveying Trauma in Landscape Photography
251(14)
Rupert Ashmore
Displaced Natural Heritage
24 Changing 'Red to Grey': Alien Species Introductions to Britain and the Displacement and Loss of Native Wildlife from our Landscapes
265(8)
Peter Lurz
25 Displacing Nature: Orang-utans in Borneo
273(10)
Marc Ancrenaz
Isabelle Lackman
26 Better to be a Beast than Evil: Human--Wolf Interaction and Putting Central Asia on the Map
283(10)
Ozgun Emre Can
27 After nanoq: flat out and bluesome: A Cultural Life of Polar Bears: Displacement as a Colonial Trope and Strategy in Contemporary Art
293(10)
Bryndis Snqbjornsdottir
Mark Wilson
28 What Heritage? Whose Heritage? Debates Around Culling Badgers in the UK
303(8)
Pat Caplan
29 The Great Barrier Reef: Environment, Disaster and Heritage
311(10)
Billy Sinclair
Endpiece 321(4)
Phil O'Keefe
List of Contributors 325(8)
Index 333
IAN CONVERY is Professor of Environment & Society at the University of Cumbria. He is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and is a director of the Lifescapes Project conservation charity. PETER DAVIS is Emeritus Professor of Museology in the School of Arts and Cultures at Newcastle University, UK. His research interests relate to the connections between place, nature, heritage, communities and sustainability. IAN CONVERY is Professor of Environment & Society at the University of Cumbria. He is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and is a director of the Lifescapes Project conservation charity. PETER DAVIS is Emeritus Professor of Museology in the School of Arts and Cultures at Newcastle University, UK. His research interests relate to the connections between place, nature, heritage, communities and sustainability.