ABSTRACT

Urban heritage, which is part of the conceptual expansion of cultural heritage, has become an extraordinarily complex notion. Any aspect of urban life and experience can become heritage and this heritage is then continuously reinterpreted and exploited as a source not only for a city’s identification but also for its cultural and economic innovation.

This book provides a detailed overview of Central European urban heritage. It examines the key aspects of urban heritage –tangible/monumental, natural/landscape, world heritage/urban quarter and heritage experience/dark heritage. The ‘regimes of urban heritage’ approach retraces 200 years of the development of European urban heritage to understand how it has become so significant and how it could integrate practically every area of urban existence.

The novelty of the book is the interpretation of this development as a process of successive and integrating regimes, which are examined through the changing urban heritage agency and discourse. Through the examples of European cities and towns, such as Belgrade, Budapest, Gdansk, Krakow, Ljubljana, Subotica, Szentendre, Vienna, but also Edinburgh, Nordic cities and Rome, these changes reveal their inner complexities and become comparable in an interdisciplinary analysis. Further, a particular aspect of the history of these cities is revealed through the development of their own urban heritage.

The book is primarily aimed at academics, researchers and postgraduate students of cultural and economic geography, cultural history, culture and heritage management, modern and contemporary history as well as urban history, planning and sociology.

part I|48 pages

Introduction

part II|52 pages

Preserving Urban Monuments

part III|47 pages

Urban Landscapes

chapter 5|31 pages

Design History of 19th-Century Urban Public Parks

Relevance of Historic Parks in Urban Landscape Heritage

chapter 6|14 pages

The Lure of Timeless Urban Landscapes

Built and Pictorial Heritage at Szentendre

part IV|31 pages

Urban Heritage as Innovation

chapter 8|12 pages

Urban Heritage Regimes From a Blind Spot

Mapping Conservation Dynamics at the Margins of Rome Historic Centre

part V|39 pages

Experiencing Dark Urban Heritage

chapter 9|16 pages

Restoring Overwritten Places

The German Past of Danzig/Gdańsk in Contemporary Polish Prose

chapter 10|21 pages

Longing for the Unwanted

Legacies of Socialism and Urban Heritage Tourism in Contemporary Belgrade