Critical Perspectives on Cultural Memory and Heritage: Construction, Transformation and Destruction
edited by Veysel Apaydin
University College London, 2020 Cloth: 978-1-78735-486-9 | Paper: 978-1-78735-485-2
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK Critical Perspectives on Cultural Memory and Heritage focuses on the importance of memory and heritage for individual and group identity, and for their sense of belonging. It aims to expose the motives and discourses related to the destruction of memory and heritage during times of war, terror, sectarian conflict and through capitalist policies. It is within these affected spheres of cultural heritage where groups and communities ascribe values, develop memories, and shape their collective identity. It is an essential read for researchers in Museum and Heritage Studies, Archaeology and History who seek a global, comprehensive study of cultural memory and heritage.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Veysel Apaydin is a Senior Teaching Fellow in Art, Design and Museology at the UCL Institute of Education, Department of Culture, Communication and Media. He is the editor of the volume Shared Knowledge, Shared Power: Engaging Local and Indigenous Heritage. He is also currently editor of the heritage section of the Open Archaeology journal.
REVIEWS
"A ‘go-to’ volume for conservators working with various sites and objects from and in ‘the field’, who are interested to understand the politics of heritage making, management and protection.'
Journal of the Institute of Conservation "
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction: why cultural memoryand heritage? VeyselApaydin Part I: Conceptualizing Cultural Memory and Heritage 1. The interlinkage of cultural memory, heritage and discourses of construction, transformation and destruction VeyselApaydin Part II: Urban Heritage, Development, Transformation and Destruction 2. Mega-structural violence: considering African literary perspectives on infrastructure, modernity and destruction RachelKing 3. Competing for the past: the London 2012 Olympic Games, archaeology, and the ‘wasteland’ JonathanGardner 4. Covert erasure and agents of change in the heritage city ColinSterling 5. Heritage, memory and social justice: reclaiming space and identity VeyselApaydin 6. Amnesiaby design: building and rebuilding in a Mediterranean small island state ReubenGrima 7. Vanishing heritage, materialising memory: construction, destruction and social action in contemporary Madrid JaimeAlmansa-Sánchez & Nekbet Corpas-Cívicos Part III: Indigenous Heritage and Destruction 8. Considering the denigration and destruction of Indigenous heritage as violence GeorgeNicholas and Claire Smith 9. IndigenousLatino heritage: destruction, invisibility, appropriation, revival, survivance.Images from Central America. PaulEdward Montgomery Ramírez 10. Rescuing’ the ground from under their feet? Contract archaeology and human rights violations in the Brazilian Amazon Bruna Cigaran da Rocha 11. Order and disorder:Indigenous Australian cultural heritages and the case of settler-colonial ambivalence AmandaKearney Part IV: Conflicts, Violence, War and Destruction 12. Cultural memory as a mechanism for community cohesion: the case study of Dayr Mar Elian esh-Sharqi,Qaryatayn, Syria Emma Loosley Leeming 13. Bosnia and the destruction of identity HelenWalasek 14. 'Bombing Pompeii!!! Why not the Pyramids?' Myths and memories of the Allied bombing of Pompeii. Nigel D. Pollard Part V: Heritage, Identity and Destruction 15. Reclaiming the past as a matter of social justice: African American heritage, representation and identity in the United States ErinLinn-Tynen 16. Alternating cycles ofthe politics of forgetting and remembering the past in Taiwan NicolasZorzin 17. A glimpse into the crystal ball: how do we select the memory of the future? Moniquevan den Dries & Jose Schreurs Part VI: Epilogue 18. 'Cultural heritage is concerned with the future'. A critical epilogue. CorneliusHoltorf Index
Critical Perspectives on Cultural Memory and Heritage: Construction, Transformation and Destruction
edited by Veysel Apaydin
University College London, 2020 Cloth: 978-1-78735-486-9 Paper: 978-1-78735-485-2
Critical Perspectives on Cultural Memory and Heritage focuses on the importance of memory and heritage for individual and group identity, and for their sense of belonging. It aims to expose the motives and discourses related to the destruction of memory and heritage during times of war, terror, sectarian conflict and through capitalist policies. It is within these affected spheres of cultural heritage where groups and communities ascribe values, develop memories, and shape their collective identity. It is an essential read for researchers in Museum and Heritage Studies, Archaeology and History who seek a global, comprehensive study of cultural memory and heritage.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Veysel Apaydin is a Senior Teaching Fellow in Art, Design and Museology at the UCL Institute of Education, Department of Culture, Communication and Media. He is the editor of the volume Shared Knowledge, Shared Power: Engaging Local and Indigenous Heritage. He is also currently editor of the heritage section of the Open Archaeology journal.
REVIEWS
"A ‘go-to’ volume for conservators working with various sites and objects from and in ‘the field’, who are interested to understand the politics of heritage making, management and protection.'
Journal of the Institute of Conservation "
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction: why cultural memoryand heritage? VeyselApaydin Part I: Conceptualizing Cultural Memory and Heritage 1. The interlinkage of cultural memory, heritage and discourses of construction, transformation and destruction VeyselApaydin Part II: Urban Heritage, Development, Transformation and Destruction 2. Mega-structural violence: considering African literary perspectives on infrastructure, modernity and destruction RachelKing 3. Competing for the past: the London 2012 Olympic Games, archaeology, and the ‘wasteland’ JonathanGardner 4. Covert erasure and agents of change in the heritage city ColinSterling 5. Heritage, memory and social justice: reclaiming space and identity VeyselApaydin 6. Amnesiaby design: building and rebuilding in a Mediterranean small island state ReubenGrima 7. Vanishing heritage, materialising memory: construction, destruction and social action in contemporary Madrid JaimeAlmansa-Sánchez & Nekbet Corpas-Cívicos Part III: Indigenous Heritage and Destruction 8. Considering the denigration and destruction of Indigenous heritage as violence GeorgeNicholas and Claire Smith 9. IndigenousLatino heritage: destruction, invisibility, appropriation, revival, survivance.Images from Central America. PaulEdward Montgomery Ramírez 10. Rescuing’ the ground from under their feet? Contract archaeology and human rights violations in the Brazilian Amazon Bruna Cigaran da Rocha 11. Order and disorder:Indigenous Australian cultural heritages and the case of settler-colonial ambivalence AmandaKearney Part IV: Conflicts, Violence, War and Destruction 12. Cultural memory as a mechanism for community cohesion: the case study of Dayr Mar Elian esh-Sharqi,Qaryatayn, Syria Emma Loosley Leeming 13. Bosnia and the destruction of identity HelenWalasek 14. 'Bombing Pompeii!!! Why not the Pyramids?' Myths and memories of the Allied bombing of Pompeii. Nigel D. Pollard Part V: Heritage, Identity and Destruction 15. Reclaiming the past as a matter of social justice: African American heritage, representation and identity in the United States ErinLinn-Tynen 16. Alternating cycles ofthe politics of forgetting and remembering the past in Taiwan NicolasZorzin 17. A glimpse into the crystal ball: how do we select the memory of the future? Moniquevan den Dries & Jose Schreurs Part VI: Epilogue 18. 'Cultural heritage is concerned with the future'. A critical epilogue. CorneliusHoltorf Index
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC