Images, Representations and Heritage: Moving beyond Modern Approaches to Archaeology

an edited volume by Ian Russell

• See the Table of Contents

• Read the Introductions by Ian Russell

Read an excerpt from Section 1: Archaeologically Imagined Communities and Chapter 1 by Deirdre Stritch (Trinity College Dublin) Archaeological Tourism as a Signpost to National Identity: Raising Aphrodite in Cyprus

• Read Chapter 2 by Stephen A. Brighton (Boston University) & Charles E. Orser, Jr (Illinois University) Irish Images on English Goods in the American Market: The Materialization of a Modern Irish Heritage

Reviews

'This collection of essays takes our understanding of the public role of archaeology forward, by placing themes of representation, tourism and the heritage industry into the contexts of contemporary debates on the character of modern society. Where public archaeology is often blandly portrayed as a matter of the management of a cultural resource, Russell's volume presents the traces of the past as active in the present, recruited in the formation of multiple identities, circulated in media and the arts, and formative of dreams and fantasies. This is a book that will be of interest to anyone concerned with the place of the past in today's world, not simply archaeologists and heritage professionals.'
Professor Julian Thomas, School of Arts, Histories and Cultures, University of Manchester

'Reaching for some new ways to approach archaeology, editor Russell brings together 12 contributions scholars based in Europe and the US who come from diverse disciplines including art, archaeology, architecture, history, visual culture, classics, and regional planning.... The subject index affords access to the specifics of this wide-ranging exploration.' (Reference and Research Book News, November 2006)

'One of the intriguing elements of this book is the opportunity at the end of each section for authors to respond to their articles and the articles of others. This gives a congruency to chapters where seemingly different topics of museum design, Irish passage tombs, and bog bodies can be seen as connected under some broad intellectual thread of understanding. Russell did well as the editor of this volume acting as both a guide and a narrator connecting dots and helping explain themes, allowing chapter authors to do what they do best, tell us about their topics. In this book you will find no mention of flaked stone, Egyptian mummies, or Meso-American temples, though Stonehenge is mentioned. If you are looking for a good book from a distinctly post-modern approach on the future of archaeology, you should look no further.' (Historical Archaeology)

 

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