ABSTRACT

This book examines multivocality in 21st-century World Heritage management through an in-depth interdisciplinary exploration of the complexity and plurality of voices on the ground at a specific World Heritage site, offering new perspectives and insights into the established inherent tension between change and heritage conservation.

Through an interdisciplinary approach, the book presents a rich variety of cases grounded in a single World Heritage site, to provide new insights and perspectives on World Heritage as complex local phenomena entangled in global processes. Multivocality and constant change are fundamental to all societies, and must therefore be emphasised and also applied to World Heritage sites, including the UNESCO site under scrutiny in this volume: The Rjukan-Notodden Industrial Heritage Site in Southern Norway. If World Heritage is to promote shared commitments to both conservation and principles of sustainability, the concept of conservation must acknowledge and accommodate change. Bringing together academic approaches from different disciplines, this edited volume addresses this pressing issue by paying serious attention to local complexities and multiple perspectives on the ground. The cases presented demonstrate the relevance of applying a broader sense of multivocality to improve practices in World Heritage management, policymaking, planning and governance. Multivocality emerges as a perspective attentive to diversity and complexity, questioning reductionism, and challenging monocultural thinking in global World Heritage management, while supporting a more democratic multitude of voices in World Heritage sites, both human and more-than-human.

This book will be of interest to researchers and students in the multidisciplinary field of heritage, heritage policymakers and bureaucrats, international advisory bodies to UNESCO, as well as managers at different levels in the World Heritage arena.

 

The Open Access version of this book, available at https://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons [Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC BY-NC-ND)] 4.0 license

 

 

 

chapter 1|22 pages

Introduction

Title
Challenges of multivocality
Size: 2.09 MB

chapter 2|14 pages

Fertilising heritage

Title
Multivocality, memory politics and semiotic control in a world heritage site
Size: 0.10 MB

chapter 3|13 pages

Multivocal negotiations

Title
Developers, bureaucracy and affordances of a heritage building
Size: 0.91 MB

chapter 4|15 pages

Awestruck

Title
Multivocality and place-based learning in a World Heritage setting
Size: 2.59 MB

chapter 5|14 pages

Rallar voices

Title
Marginality and intertextuality in navvy songs from Rjukan and Notodden
Size: 3.41 MB

chapter 6|13 pages

Silver reflections

Title
Entangled experiences of silver, people and land
Size: 1.15 MB
Size: 3.47 MB

chapter 8|12 pages

Photo essay

Title
Lines through time
Size: 11.56 MB

chapter 9|14 pages

Water as a zone of conflicting interests

Title
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chapter 10|15 pages

Towards a geological heritage

Title
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chapter 11|13 pages

The multivocality of Rjukanfossen

Title
What is to be sustained in World Heritage?
Size: 2.11 MB
Size: 0.07 MB