TY - BOOK AU - Fairclough,G.J. TI - The heritage reader SN - 9780415372855 (hardback : alk. paper) AV - CC135 .H4633 2008 U1 - 930.1 22 PY - 2008/// CY - London, New York PB - Routledge KW - Antiquities KW - Collection and preservation KW - Historic preservation KW - Historic sites KW - Conservation and restoration KW - Cultural property KW - Protection KW - Landscape protection KW - Europe KW - North America KW - Australia N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Introduction : heritage, memory and modernity; Rodney Harrison [and others]; Ch. 1; Heritage management, theory and practice; John Schofield --; Ch. 2; Heritage : from patrimony to pastiche; Graeme Davison --; Ch. 3; Cultural heritage management in the United States : past, present, and future; John H. Jameson Jr. --; Ch. 4; Towards a theoretical framework for archaeological heritage management; Laurajane Smith --; Ch. 5; Excavation as theatre; Chris Tilley --; Ch. 6; Only connect : sustainable development and cultural heritage; Kate Clark --; Ch. 7; Assessing values in conservation planning : methodological issues and choices; Randall Mason --; Ch. 8; Is the past a non-renewable resource?; Cornelius J. Holtorf --; Ch. 9; Sites of memory and sites of discord : historic monuments as a medium for discussing conflict in Europe; Gabi Dolff-Bonekämper --; Ch. 10; Archaeology and authority in the twenty-first century; Roger M. Thomas --; Ch. 11; Heritage as social action; Denis Byrne --; Ch. 12; Politics of the past : conflict in the use of heritage in the modern world; Rodney Harrison --; Ch. 13; Professional attitudes to indigenous interests in the Native Title era : settler societies compared; Ian Lilley --; Ch. 14; Globalisation of archaeology and heritage : a discussion with Arjun Appadurai; Arjun Appadurai ; with Ashish Chadha [and others] --; Ch. 15; Whose heritage? un-settling "The heritage", re-imagining the post-nation; Stuart Hall --; Ch. 16; Western hegemony in archaeological heritage management; Denis Byrne --; Ch. 17; Whose heritage to conserve? : cross-cultural reflections on political dominance and urban heritage conservation; John E. Tunbridge --; Ch. 18; "Time out of mind" -- "mind out of time" : custom versus tradition in environmental heritage research and interpretation; Kenneth Robert Olwig --; Ch. 19; Conflict in the archaeology of living traditions; Robert Layton --; Ch. 20; Politics; Raphael Samuel --; Ch. 21; New heritage, an introductory essay : people, landscape and change; Graham Fairclough --; Ch. 22; Sustaining the historic environment : new perspectives on the future; English Heritage --; Ch. 23; Conservation plan; James Semple Kerr --; Ch. 24; Commemorative integrity and cultural landscapes : two national historic sites in British Columbia; Lyle Dick --; Ch. 25; Explaining LARA : the Lincoln Archaeological Research Assessment in its policy context; David Stocker --; Ch. 26; Assessing public perception of landscape: the LANDMAP experience; Alister Scott --; Ch. 27; Cultural heritage and resources; Richard Stoffle --; Ch. 28; Cultural connections to the land : a Canadian example; Ellen Lee --; Ch. 29; "Emu in the hole" : exploring the link between biodiversity and Aboriginal cultural heritage in New South Wales, Australia; Anthony English --; Ch. 30; Social sustainability : people, history and values; Seth M. Low --; Ch. 31; European Landscape Convention : an extract --; Ch. 32; "Long Chain" : archaeology, historic landscape characterisation and time-depth in the landscape; Graham Fairclough --; Ch. 33; Presenting archaeology to the public, then and now : an introduction; John H. Jameson Jr. --; Ch. 34; Archaeological messages and messengers; Francis P. McManamon --; Ch. 35; "Leveling the playing field in the contested territory of the South African past : a "public" versus a "people's" form of historical archaeology outreach; Patrice L. Jeppson --; Ch. 36; Heritage that hurts : interpretation in a postmodern world; David Uzzell and Roy Ballantyne --; Ch. 37; Archaeologies that hurt; descendents that matter : a pragmatic approach to collaboration in the public interpretation of African-American heritage; Carol McDavid --; Ch. 38; Stonehenge, a final solution?; Peter Stone --; Ch. 39; More than just "telling the story" : interpretive narrative archaeology; John P. McCarthy --; Ch. 40; Archaeologist as playwright; James G. Gibb --; Afterword --; Ch. 41; Change and creation : historic landscape character 1950-2000; Andrea Bradley [and others] --; Index N2 - Leading experts in the field from Europe, North America and Australia bring together geographically and thematically diverse case studies, to examine the theoretical framework for heritage resource management ER -