ABSTRACT

At the heart of the European debate lies the tension between the idea of European unity and individual state identities and nationalisms. This volume provides an insight into this dichotomy by exploring the role of heritage in the new Europe.

The main theme of this book is that a number of possible heritages can be shaped from the European past depending on the purposes for which they are intended. Through different methods of management intervention, heritage can fulfil a variety of functions, becoming a major commercial resource in the form of the tourism industry, or enlisted in the creation and maintenance of place identities.

Leading contributors look at different perceptions of heritage by different cultures, and the social and political consequences of heritage planning. The nature of heritage planning for emerging, spatially fragmented state structures is also discussed.

chapter 1|9 pages

A Heritage For Europe

The need, the task, the contribution

part I|33 pages

Theories and contexts

chapter 2|18 pages

From History to Heritage – From Heritage to Identity

In search of concepts and models

chapter 3|13 pages

What New Heritage for which New Europe?

Some contextual considerations

part II|71 pages

Producers and consumers

chapter 4|19 pages

Tourism And Heritage

The pressures and challenges of the 1990s

chapter 6|27 pages

Who Consumes the Heritage Product?

Implications for European heritagetourism

part III|84 pages

Choice: whose heritage, which heritage?

chapter 7|12 pages

Whose Heritage?

Global Problem, European Nightmare

part IV|73 pages

The achievements, hopes and limitations of heritage planning

chapter 11|23 pages

Tourism

Support or threat to heritage?

chapter 12|31 pages

Heritage and Culture

A capital for the new Europe

chapter 13|14 pages

A New Heritage for a New Europe

Problem and potential