Critical Built Heritage Practice and Conservation supports an alternative point of departure for engaging with the historic built environment, by critically questioning the legitimacy of dominant conservation concepts and methods.
Critical Built Heritage Practice and Conservation supports an alternative point of departure for engaging with the historic built environment, by critically questioning the legitimacy of dominant conservation concepts and methods.
Johnathan Djabarouti is a registered architect (ARB), accredited conservation professional (IHBC) and Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (FHEA). Following nearly a decade in professional practice working on both new and old buildings in historic contexts, he is currently Senior Lecturer in Architecture at the Manchester School of Architecture (MSA), UK. In 2018 he received AHRC funding for his PhD project titled The impact of intangible heritage on architectural and building conservation practices in the UK: a socio-material outlook. He has been an Academy Panellist on the RIBA Advanced Conservation Course since 2022 where he teaches delegates about intangible heritage and its relationship to heritage buildings, and in 2023 he secured an AHRC Innovation Scholars Secondment grant to Historic England for his project Intangible heritage and design in historic contexts. His research on the intersections between the conservation/adaptation of built heritage and critical heritage theory have been published and presented widely.
Inhaltsangabe
List of figures List of tables List of acronyms Foreword Acknowledgements Introduction: appraising norms of practice Part I: from materials to meanings Chapter 1 - antiquity and anxiety Chapter 2 - the postmodern heritage turn Chapter 3 - evolving perspectives on authenticity Part II: towards an intangible outlook Chapter 4 - immaterial manifestations of culture Chapter 5 - immateriality and change in policy and guidance Chapter 6 - deconstructing communal value Chapter 7 - symbolism and spirituality Part III: architectural conservation as future-oriented practice Chapter 8 - building conservation as memory-making practice Chapter 9 - participatory problems Chapter 10 - a socio-material outlook Concluding remarks: heritage futures and the role of the architectural conservationist Index
List of figures List of tables List of acronyms
Foreword Acknowledgements
Introduction: appraising norms of practice
Part I: from materials to meanings
Chapter 1 - antiquity and anxiety Chapter 2 - the postmodern heritage turn Chapter 3 - evolving perspectives on authenticity
Part II: towards an intangible outlook
Chapter 4 - immaterial manifestations of culture Chapter 5 - immateriality and change in policy and guidance Chapter 6 - deconstructing communal value Chapter 7 - symbolism and spirituality
Part III: architectural conservation as future-oriented practice
Chapter 8 - building conservation as memory-making practice Chapter 9 - participatory problems Chapter 10 - a socio-material outlook
Concluding remarks: heritage futures and the role of the architectural conservationist
List of figures List of tables List of acronyms Foreword Acknowledgements Introduction: appraising norms of practice Part I: from materials to meanings Chapter 1 - antiquity and anxiety Chapter 2 - the postmodern heritage turn Chapter 3 - evolving perspectives on authenticity Part II: towards an intangible outlook Chapter 4 - immaterial manifestations of culture Chapter 5 - immateriality and change in policy and guidance Chapter 6 - deconstructing communal value Chapter 7 - symbolism and spirituality Part III: architectural conservation as future-oriented practice Chapter 8 - building conservation as memory-making practice Chapter 9 - participatory problems Chapter 10 - a socio-material outlook Concluding remarks: heritage futures and the role of the architectural conservationist Index
List of figures List of tables List of acronyms
Foreword Acknowledgements
Introduction: appraising norms of practice
Part I: from materials to meanings
Chapter 1 - antiquity and anxiety Chapter 2 - the postmodern heritage turn Chapter 3 - evolving perspectives on authenticity
Part II: towards an intangible outlook
Chapter 4 - immaterial manifestations of culture Chapter 5 - immateriality and change in policy and guidance Chapter 6 - deconstructing communal value Chapter 7 - symbolism and spirituality
Part III: architectural conservation as future-oriented practice
Chapter 8 - building conservation as memory-making practice Chapter 9 - participatory problems Chapter 10 - a socio-material outlook
Concluding remarks: heritage futures and the role of the architectural conservationist
Index
Rezensionen
The understanding of heritage has evolved to encompass a complexity of interwoven tangible and intangible aspects. This erudite, accessible book unpacks the subject to create an authoritative and compelling guide to one of the most important issues of the 21st century. Sally Stone, Reader in Adaptive Reuse, Manchester School Architecture
Djabarouti successfully brings Critical Heritage Theory into meaningful dialogue with conservation practice. The result is a major contribution to integrating these key (but all too often disparate) approaches. This important book is a future classic in the making. Dr Nigel Walter, Conservation Architect, author of Narrative Theory in Conservation
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