ABSTRACT

This book explores cultural sustainability and its relationships to heritage from a wide interdisciplinary perspective. By examining the interactions between people and communities in the places where they live it exemplifies the diverse ways in which a people-centred heritage builds identities and supports individual and collective memories. It encourages a view of heritage as a process that contributes through cultural sustainability to human well-being and socially- and culturally-sensitive policy.

With theoretically-informed case studies from leading researchers, the book addresses both concepts and practice, in a range of places and contexts including landscape, townscape, museums, industrial sites, every day heritage, ‘ordinary’ places and the local scene, and even UNESCO-designated sites. The contributors, most of whom, like the editors, were members of the COST Action ‘Investigating Cultural Sustainability’, demonstrate in a cohesive way how the cultural values that people attach to place are enmeshed with issues of memory, identity and aspiration and how they therefore stand at the centre of sustainability discourse and practice. The cases are drawn from many parts of Europe, but notably from the Baltic, and central and south-eastern Europe, regions with distinctive recent histories and cultural approaches and heritage discourses that offer less well-known but transferable insights. They all illustrate the contribution that dealing with the inheritance of the past can make to a full cultural engagement with sustainable development.

The book provides an introductory framework to guide readers, and a concluding section that draws on the case studies to emphasise their transferability and specificity, and to outline the potential contribution of the examples to future research, practice and policy in cultural sustainability. This is a unique offering for postgraduate students, researchers and professionals interested in heritage management, governance and community participation and cultural sustainability.

chapter |22 pages

Living between past and future

An introduction to heritage and cultural sustainability

part I|92 pages

Equity, inclusion, citizenship

chapter 1|15 pages

Ordinary heritage, participation and social cohesion

The suburbs of Paris

chapter 2|14 pages

‘Keeping it real'

Social sustainability in the Homeless Heritage project in Bristol and York

chapter 3|15 pages

The burden of history

Living heritage and everyday life in Rome

chapter 4|15 pages

Remembering cities

The role of memory in the culturally sustainable development of Dubrovnik (Croatia)

chapter 5|12 pages

The challenge of cultural sustainability in city museums

Showing the city and selecting the past in Noyon (France)

chapter 6|19 pages

Social sustainability in historic city centres

The Grand Place in Brussels

part II|97 pages

Construction, recovery, resilience

chapter 7|15 pages

Language revitalisation, sonic activism and cultural sustainability

Voicing linguistic heritage on Jersey

chapter 8|15 pages

Heritage resurrection

German heritage in the Southern Baltic cities

chapter 9|14 pages

Sustainability through alteration

Eastern Baltic manors in the Estonian tradition

chapter 10|15 pages

The potential space for cultural sustainability

Place narratives and place-heritage in Rjukan (Norway)

chapter 11|14 pages

Politics, tourism and cultural sustainability

The construction of heritage in Cyprus

chapter 12|13 pages

From dissonance to resilience

The heritage of Belgrade's Staro Sajmište

chapter 13|9 pages

Aftermath or futures

Concluding thoughts