Description

Book Synopsis
Using local, national and international perspectives on the meanings and uses of heritage cities, this book explores how a site can turn into a mummification of the past, lifelessly displaying long-gone splendour, or a living, breathing treasure offering dynamic cultural and educational opportunities. Multiple and competing views, needs and desires amongst the different people who use a city are explored alongside notions of power, national identity, race and class in heritage settings. Discussing the case of UNESCO World Heritage town Ouro Preto in Brazil, the author asks how and why democratic participation in heritage fails or succeeds, and how preserved historic cities can still provide quality of life to those living and working there.

Trade Review
This book’s sustained focus on tensions between governance/management structures and community rights/participation in the definition and use of urban space and heritage in Ouro Preto speaks to current concerns in heritage studies and urban development. The close-grained ethnographic and historically grounded studies are immensely useful in adding real-world critiques to the burgeoning heritage and urban development policy context of not only national, but also international agents, such as UNESCO. -- Dr Helle Jørgensen, Lecturer in Cultural Heritage Studies, Ironbridge International Institute for Cultural Heritage, University of Birmingham
By placing questions of national identity, power, and politics at the center of an investigation into urban memory, cultural heritage, and legacies of social injustice in Brazil, this book provides an important contribution to contemporary social science debates. It is innovative in its methodological approach (owing to the author’s ethnographic study of historical memory), as well as how it highlights connections between postcolonial development, the role of the state, and discourses of public participation. -- Jeff Garmany, School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Melbourne

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments List of Graphs, Images, Maps and Tables Preface Introduction Chapter 1 - Expressing the nation through planning and architecture: Locating national memories Chapter 2 - Fault lines in a fragmented city Chapter 3 - Sightseeing the city Chapter 4 - Opportunities for participation in the governance of cultural heritage Chapter 5 - Infrastructure in Heritage Sites Chapter 6 - Preservation or mummification in Miguel Burnier Final considerations Notes Bibliography

The Politics of Memory: Urban Cultural Heritage

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    A Hardback by Andreza Aruska de Souza Santos

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      View other formats and editions of The Politics of Memory: Urban Cultural Heritage by Andreza Aruska de Souza Santos

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield International
      Publication Date: 20/11/2019
      ISBN13: 9781786611215, 978-1786611215
      ISBN10: 178661121X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Using local, national and international perspectives on the meanings and uses of heritage cities, this book explores how a site can turn into a mummification of the past, lifelessly displaying long-gone splendour, or a living, breathing treasure offering dynamic cultural and educational opportunities. Multiple and competing views, needs and desires amongst the different people who use a city are explored alongside notions of power, national identity, race and class in heritage settings. Discussing the case of UNESCO World Heritage town Ouro Preto in Brazil, the author asks how and why democratic participation in heritage fails or succeeds, and how preserved historic cities can still provide quality of life to those living and working there.

      Trade Review
      This book’s sustained focus on tensions between governance/management structures and community rights/participation in the definition and use of urban space and heritage in Ouro Preto speaks to current concerns in heritage studies and urban development. The close-grained ethnographic and historically grounded studies are immensely useful in adding real-world critiques to the burgeoning heritage and urban development policy context of not only national, but also international agents, such as UNESCO. -- Dr Helle Jørgensen, Lecturer in Cultural Heritage Studies, Ironbridge International Institute for Cultural Heritage, University of Birmingham
      By placing questions of national identity, power, and politics at the center of an investigation into urban memory, cultural heritage, and legacies of social injustice in Brazil, this book provides an important contribution to contemporary social science debates. It is innovative in its methodological approach (owing to the author’s ethnographic study of historical memory), as well as how it highlights connections between postcolonial development, the role of the state, and discourses of public participation. -- Jeff Garmany, School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Melbourne

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments List of Graphs, Images, Maps and Tables Preface Introduction Chapter 1 - Expressing the nation through planning and architecture: Locating national memories Chapter 2 - Fault lines in a fragmented city Chapter 3 - Sightseeing the city Chapter 4 - Opportunities for participation in the governance of cultural heritage Chapter 5 - Infrastructure in Heritage Sites Chapter 6 - Preservation or mummification in Miguel Burnier Final considerations Notes Bibliography

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