The Cultural Landscape & Heritage Paradox : Protection and Development of the Dutch Archaeological-historical Landscape and its European Dimension.
About understanding and managing the archaeological-historical landscape and its heritage, in the Netherlands and in Europe.
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Main Author: | |
Other Authors: | , |
Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Amsterdam :
Amsterdam University Press,
2010
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Series: | Landscape & Heritage Proceedings, 3.
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Subjects: | |
Local Note: | ProQuest Ebook Central |
Table of Contents:
- TABLE OF CONTENTS; PREFACE; I. INTRODUCTION; 1. The Cultural Landscape and Heritage Paradox; II. INSIGHTS AND PROSPECTS OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL HISTORICAL LANDSCAPE STUDIES; 1. Introduction to 'Protecting and Developing the Dutch Archaeological-Historical Landscape' (PDL/BBO); 2. Planning the past. Lessons to be learned from 'Protecting and Developing the Dutch Archaeological-Historical Landscape' (PDL/BBO); 3. Actors and orders: the shaping of landscapes and identities; III. LINKING KNOWLEDGE AND ACTION; 1. Linking knowledge to action: an introduction.
- 2. The cultural biography of landscape as a tool for action research in the Drentsche Aa National Landscape (Northern Netherlands)3. From inventory to identity? Constructing the Lahemaa National Park's (Estonia) regional cultural heritage; 4. A biography of the cultural landscape in the eastern Netherlands: theory and practice of acquisition and propagation of knowledge; 5. The protection and management of the historic landscape in Scotland in the context of the European Landscape Convention.
- 6. Assessing in situ preservation of archaeological wetland sites by chemical analysis of botanical remains and micromorphology7. The ancient quarry and mining district between the Eifel and the Rhine: aims and progress of the Vulkanpark Osteifel Project.; IV. IMAGINATION
- FACTS AND CONSTRUCTIONS; 1. Imagination: facts and constructions; 2. From Oer-IJ estuary to metropolitan coastal landscape; 3. Two sorting-machines for the Oer-IJ; 4. Images, attitudes and measures in the field of cultural heritage in Norway; 5. The good, the bad and the self-referential.
- 6. Interpretative heritage research and the politics of democratization and de-democratization7. Past pictures. Landscape visualization with digital tools; 8. Gazing at places we have never been. Landscape, heritage and identity; 9. 'Green' and 'blue' developments. Prospects for research and conservation of early prehistoric hunter-gatherer landscapes; 10. Presentation, appreciation and conservation of liminal landscapes: challenges from an Irish perspective.
- 11. My story
- your story: three levels for reflecting and debating the relationship between contemporary archaeological heritage management and the publicV. SHARING KNOWLEDGE
- STORIES, MAPS AND DESIGN; 1. Introduction: sharing knowledge
- stories, maps and design; 2. Revitalizing history: moving from historical landscape reconstructions to heritage practices in the southern Netherlands; 3. The role of historical expertise in today's heritage management, landscape development and spatial planning.
- 4. The potential of remote sensing, magnetometry and geochemical prospection in the characterization and inspection of archaeological sites and landscapes in the Netherlands.