ABSTRACT

Heritage Ecologies presents an ecological understanding of heritage that furthers a concern for how its making and unmaking always involves a wide range of human and other-than-human actors.

Recognizing the entangled nature-cultures of heritage is essential in the Anthropocene era, where uncertainty and rapid environmental change force us to recast common conceptions of inheritance and to envision new strategies for preservation. Heritage sites are meant to be open and shared spaces, and a recurring argument in the cases presented here is that this openness inevitably also overrides our selections, orders and appreciations. Through a diverse range of case studies, the chapters collected in this book aim to explore the affects and memories engendered by diverse heritage ecologies where humans are neither the sole makers nor the only inheritors. The common call is that the experiential, perceptive and informational plenitude enabled through contributions of other-than-human actors is key to an ecological rethinking of heritage in the twenty-first century.

Heritage Ecologies is unique in bringing heritage studies into closer proximity with a wide variety of non-representational and object-oriented theories and is an important volume for students and researchers in archaeology and heritage studies.

part I|27 pages

Introduction

part II|75 pages

Anthropocene

chapter 2|18 pages

Legacies

Rethinking the futures of heritage and waste in the Anthropocene

chapter 3|17 pages

Scars

Living with ambiguous pasts

chapter 4|15 pages

Wilderness Heritage

For an ontology of the Anthropocene

chapter 6|12 pages

Oil Matters

part III|78 pages

Affect

chapter 7|22 pages

Emergent Images

Matters of affect in heritage photography

chapter 8|16 pages

Affective Encounters in Museums

chapter 9|20 pages

A Gentle Shock of Mild Surprise

Surface ecologies and the archaeological encounter

chapter 10|18 pages

From-the-Hip

Rocks and critical heritage ecology in the Western Australian Pilbara

part IV|99 pages

Memory

chapter 11|23 pages

Mending Shattered Time

22 July in Norwegian collective memory

chapter 12|14 pages

The Remembrance of Things

The industrial heritage of mining and the ecology of memory

chapter 13|24 pages

Interstitial Heritage

Industrienatur and ecologies of memory

chapter 14|18 pages

Memory and Redemption

Lessons from a peasant ecology

chapter 15|18 pages

(Sm)all Things Remembered

part V|98 pages

Entanglements

chapter 16|21 pages

A Positive Passivity

Entropy and ecology in the ruins

chapter 18|23 pages

Mold, Weeds and Plastic Lanterns

Ecological aftermath in a derelict garden

chapter 20|12 pages

I Shed Tears, Left, and Forgot

The common frog, mosquitoes, and Grandmother Pine stayed

part VI|21 pages

Epilogues/reflections

chapter 21|8 pages

Inheritance

chapter 22|11 pages

Ecotone