ABSTRACT

Narrative Theory in Conservation engages with conservation, heritage studies, and architectural approaches to historic buildings, offering a synthesis of the best of each, and demonstrating that conservation is capable of developing a complementary, but distinct, theoretical position of its own.

Tracing the ideas behind the development of modern conservation in the West, and considering the challenges presented by non-Western practice, the book engages with the premodern understanding of innovation within tradition, and frames historic buildings as intergenerational, communal, ongoing narratives. Redefining the appropriate object of conservation, it suggests a practice of conserving the questions that animate and energize local cultures, rather than only those instantiated answers that expert opinion has declared canonical. Proposing a narrative approach to historic buildings, the book provides a distinctive new theoretical foundation for conservation, and a basis for a more equal dialogue with other disciplines concerned with the historic environment.

Narrative Theory in Conservation articulates a coherent theoretical position for conservation that addresses the urgent question of how historic buildings that remain in use should respond to change. As such, the book should be of great interest to academics, researchers, and postgraduate students from the fields of conservation, heritage studies, and architecture.

chapter Chapter 1|39 pages

Context

People and change in conservation

chapter Chapter 2|25 pages

Modernity

Conservation, discontinuity, and the past

chapter |14 pages

Case study

Carlo Scarpa, William Morris, and the Castelvecchio, Verona

chapter Chapter 3|31 pages

People

Community, language, and power

chapter |14 pages

Case study

St Alkmund, Duffield, and the ecclesiastical exemption

chapter Chapter 4|25 pages

Tradition

Change and continuity

chapter Chapter 5|25 pages

Narrative

Time, history, and what happens next

chapter Chapter 6|31 pages

Application

The narrative approach to conservation

chapter |6 pages

Case Study: The SCARAB Manifesto

chapter Chapter 7|9 pages

Conclusion

Conservation ‘as if people mattered’