Critical perspectives on cultural memory and heritage : construction, transformation and destruction /

"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...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Apaydin, Veysel (Editor)
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: London : UCL Press, 2020.
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Online Access:Connect to this title online (unlimited users allowed)
Table of Contents:
  • Part I: Conceptualizing Cultural Memory and Heritage. The interlinkage of cultural memory, heritage and discourses of construction, transformation and destruction
  • Part II: Urban Heritage, Development, Transformation and Destruction. Mega-structural violence: considering African literary perspectives on infrastructure, modernity and destruction ; Competing for the past: the London 2012 Olympic Games, archaeology, and the 'wasteland' ; Covert erasure and agents of change in the heritage city ; Heritage, memory and social justice: reclaiming space and identity ; Amnesia by design: building and rebuilding in a Mediterranean small island state ; Vanishing heritage, materialising memory: construction, destruction and social action in contemporary Madrid
  • Part III: Indigenous Heritage and Destruction. Considering the denigration and destruction of Indigenous heritage as violence ; Indigenous Latino heritage: destruction, invisibility, appropriation, revival, survivance ; Rescuing' the ground from under their feet? Contract archaeology and human rights violations in the Brazilian Amazon ; Order and disorder: Indigenous Australian cultural heritages and the case of settler-colonial ambivalence
  • Part IV: Conflicts, Violence, War and Destruction. Cultural memory as a mechanism for community cohesion: the case study of Dayr Mar Elian esh-Sharqi, Qaryatayn, Syria ; Bosnia and the destruction of identity ; 'Bombing Pompeii!!! Why not the Pyramids?' Myths and memories of the Allied bombing of Pompeii, August-September 1943
  • Part V: Heritage, Identity and Destruction. Reclaiming the past as a matter of social justice: African American heritage, representation and identity in the United States ; Alternating cycles of the politics of forgetting and remembering the past in Taiwan ; A glimpse into the crystal ball: how do we select the memory of the future?
  • Part VI: Epilogue. 'Cultural heritage is concerned with the future'. A critical epilogue.