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Heritage, endangerment and participation: alternative futures in the Lake District
International Journal of Heritage Studies, Pages: 1 - 16
Swansea University Author: Sarah May
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DOI (Published version): 10.1080/13527258.2019.1620827
Abstract
Cultural heritage policy in the UK puts a high value on participation, and heritage agencies often encourage that participation through appealing to the endangered status of the landscapes, sites and monuments in their care. Participation takes many forms, and can involve influencing policy, contrib...
Published in: | International Journal of Heritage Studies |
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ISSN: | 1352-7258 1470-3610 |
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Taylor and Francis
2019
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa50931 |
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2020-06-24T17:46:48.4084645 v2 50931 2019-06-25 Heritage, endangerment and participation: alternative futures in the Lake District bdd0aa4f76515ad6e042e52e512f2146 0000-0002-2740-6727 Sarah May Sarah May true false 2019-06-25 AHIS Cultural heritage policy in the UK puts a high value on participation, and heritage agencies often encourage that participation through appealing to the endangered status of the landscapes, sites and monuments in their care. Participation takes many forms, and can involve influencing policy, contributing to cultural outputs and enjoying cultural activities. This paper critically examines the literature and discourse underpinning the endangerment/participation axis and presents a case study of heritage participation in the English Lake District. In order to ground critique in empirical investigation, the case study focusses on the practice of a particular fell shepherd, whose participation in heritage is not motivated by endangerment. The paper then explores the implications of this research for wider thinking about heritage and public life, arguing for the importance of moving beyond endangerment narratives for the creation of resilient heritage futures. Journal Article International Journal of Heritage Studies 1 16 Taylor and Francis 1352-7258 1470-3610 Futures, heritage, participation, policy, endangerment, Lake District 24 6 2019 2019-06-24 10.1080/13527258.2019.1620827 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13527258.2019.1620827 COLLEGE NANME History COLLEGE CODE AHIS Swansea University AHRC 2020-06-24T17:46:48.4084645 2019-06-25T18:59:57.4480152 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Culture and Communication - History Sarah May 1 Sarah May 0000-0002-2740-6727 2 0050931-26062019125307.pdf 50931.pdf 2019-06-26T12:53:07.6930000 Output 2188580 application/pdf Version of Record true 2019-06-26T00:00:00.0000000 Distributed under the terms of A Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CC-BY) Licence. true eng |
title |
Heritage, endangerment and participation: alternative futures in the Lake District |
spellingShingle |
Heritage, endangerment and participation: alternative futures in the Lake District Sarah May |
title_short |
Heritage, endangerment and participation: alternative futures in the Lake District |
title_full |
Heritage, endangerment and participation: alternative futures in the Lake District |
title_fullStr |
Heritage, endangerment and participation: alternative futures in the Lake District |
title_full_unstemmed |
Heritage, endangerment and participation: alternative futures in the Lake District |
title_sort |
Heritage, endangerment and participation: alternative futures in the Lake District |
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bdd0aa4f76515ad6e042e52e512f2146 |
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bdd0aa4f76515ad6e042e52e512f2146_***_Sarah May |
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Sarah May |
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Sarah May Sarah May |
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Journal article |
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International Journal of Heritage Studies |
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2019 |
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Swansea University |
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1352-7258 1470-3610 |
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10.1080/13527258.2019.1620827 |
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Taylor and Francis |
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https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13527258.2019.1620827 |
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description |
Cultural heritage policy in the UK puts a high value on participation, and heritage agencies often encourage that participation through appealing to the endangered status of the landscapes, sites and monuments in their care. Participation takes many forms, and can involve influencing policy, contributing to cultural outputs and enjoying cultural activities. This paper critically examines the literature and discourse underpinning the endangerment/participation axis and presents a case study of heritage participation in the English Lake District. In order to ground critique in empirical investigation, the case study focusses on the practice of a particular fell shepherd, whose participation in heritage is not motivated by endangerment. The paper then explores the implications of this research for wider thinking about heritage and public life, arguing for the importance of moving beyond endangerment narratives for the creation of resilient heritage futures. |
published_date |
2019-06-24T04:02:38Z |
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1763753232320954368 |
score |
11.037056 |