1
Hall S. Whose heritage?: Un‐settling ‘the heritage’, re‐imagining the post‐nation. Third Text 1999;13:3–13. doi:10.1080/09528829908576818
2
Benton T, Curtis P. The heritage of public commemoration. In: Understanding heritage and memory. Manchester: : Manchester University Press 2010. 44–87.https://contentstore.cla.co.uk//secure/link?id=43d8179e-6536-e711-80c9-005056af4099
3
Lee C. ‘Welcome to London’: Spectral Spaces in Sherlock Holmes’s Metropolis. Cultural Studies Review 2014;20. doi:10.5130/csr.v20i2.3195
4
Anderson B. Imagined communities: reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism. London: : Verso 1983.
5
Anico M, Peralta E. Heritage and identity: engagement and demission in the contemporary world. London: : Routledge 2009.
6
Barthes R. The Blue Guide. In: Mythologies. London: : Vintage 2000. 74–7.https://contentstore.cla.co.uk//secure/link?id=c1113bbe-4b36-e711-80c9-005056af4099
7
Basu P. The Labyrinthine Aesthetic in Contemporary Museum Design. In: Exhibition experiments. Malden, MA: : Blackwell Pub 2007. 47–70.http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9780470696118
8
Bazin G. The Museum Age. In: Museum studies: an anthology of contexts. Malden, MA: 2004. 18–22.
9
Bell D. Mythscapes: memory, mythology, and national identity. British Journal of Sociology 2003;54:63–81.http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1080/0007131032000045905/abstract
10
Carbonell BM. Museum studies: an anthology of contexts. Malden, MA: 2004.
11
Chaplin S, Stara A. Curating architecture and the city. London: : Routledge 2009.
12
Edward A. Chappell. Open-Air Museums: Architectural History for the Masses. Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 1999;58:334–41.http://www.jstor.org/stable/991526?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
13
Coleman S, Eade J. Reframing pilgrimage: cultures in motion. London: : Routledge 2004.
14
Coleman S, Crang M. Tourism: between place and performance. New York: : Berghahn Books 2002.
15
Crook JM. The British Museum. London: : Allen Lane 1972.
16
Sherman DJ, Rogoff I. Museum culture: histories, discourses, spectacles. London: : Routledge 1994.
17
Duncan C. Art Museums and the Ritual of Citizenship. In: Exhibiting cultures: the poetics and politics of museum display. Washington, D.C: : Smithsonian Institution Press 1991. 88–103.https://contentstore.cla.co.uk//secure/link?id=035a6c9b-7d36-e711-80c9-005056af4099
18
Duncan C. Civilizing rituals: inside public art museums. London: : Routledge 1995. http://www.tandfebooks.com/isbn/9780203978719
19
Duncan C, Wallach A. The universal survey museum / C. Duncan and A. Wallach.
20
Fairclough GJ. The Heritage reader. London: : Routledge 2008.
21
Fladmark JM. Heritage and museums: shaping national identity. Shaftesbury: : Donhead 2000.
22
Sophie Forgan. Building the Museum: Knowledge, Conflict, and the Power of Place. Isis 2005;96:572–85.http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/498594
23
Fraser A. Isn’t This a Wonderful Place? (A Tour of a Tour of the Guggenheim Bilbao). In: Museum frictions: public cultures/global transformations. Durham: : Duke University Press 2006. 135–60.http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9780822388296
24
Giebelhausen M. Museum Architecture: A Brief History. In: A companion to museum studies. Malden, Mass: : Blackwell 2006. 223–44.https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://shib-idp.ucl.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9781405157292
25
Giebelhausen M. The Architecture is the Museum. In: New museum theory and practice: an introduction. Malden, MA: : Blackwell 2006. 41–63.http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9780470776230
26
Giebelhausen M. The architecture of the museum: symbolic structures, urban contexts. Manchester: : Manchester University Press 2003.
27
Hamilakis Y. The nation and its ruins: antiquity, archaeology, and national imagination in Greece. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 2007.
28
Harrison R. Heritage: critical approaches. Milton Park, Abingdon: : Routledge 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203108857
29
Harrison R. Excavating Second Life: Cyber-Archaeologies, Heritage and Virtual Communities. Journal of Material Culture 2009;14:75–106. doi:10.1177/1359183508100009
30
Hillier B. Space Syntax: The language of Museum Spaces. In: A companion to museum studies. Malden, Mass: : Blackwell 2006. 282–301.https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://shib-idp.ucl.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9781405157292
31
Hobsbawm EJ, Ranger TO. The Invention of tradition. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 1983.
32
Hoelscher S. Heritage. In: A companion to museum studies. Malden, Mass: : Blackwell 2006. 198–218.https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://shib-idp.ucl.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9781405157292
33
Holtorf C. On Pastness: A Reconsideration of Materiality in Archaeological Object Authenticity. Anthropological Quarterly 2013;86:427–43. doi:10.1353/anq.2013.0026
34
Hooper-Greenhill E. Museums and the interpretation of visual culture. London: : Routledge 2000.
35
Horne D. The great museum: the re-presentation of history. London: : Pluto Press 1984.
36
Libeskind D. Daniel Libeskind: the space of encounter. New York: : Universe 2000.
37
MacCannell D. The tourist: a new theory of the leisure class. Berkeley: : University of California Press 1999.
38
Macdonald S. Museums, national, postnational and transcultural identities. Museum and society 2003;1:1–16.http://www2.le.ac.uk/departments/museumstudies/museumsociety/volumes/volume1/volume1
39
Mace R. Trafalgar Square: emblem of empire. [2nd ed.]. London: : Lawrence and Wishart 2005.
40
Macleod S. Reshaping museum space: architecture, design, exhibitions. London: : Routledge 2005. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9780203483220
41
Magnano Lampugnani V, Sachs A. Museums for a new millennium: concepts projects buildings. Munich: : Prestel 1999.
42
Merriman N. Review Article : Understanding Heritage. Journal of Material Culture 1996;1:377–86. doi:10.1177/135918359600100306
43
Millenson SF. Sir John Soane’s Museum. Ann Arbor, Mich: : UMI Research Press 1987.
44
Newhouse V. Towards a new museum. Expanded ed. New York: : Monacelli Press 2006.
45
O’Doherty B. Notes on the Gallery Space. In: Inside the white cube: the ideology of the gallery space. San Francisco: : Lapis Press 1986. 13–64.
46
Oliver P. Re-Presenting and Representing the Vernacular: The Open-Air Museum. In: Consuming, tradition, manufacturing heritage: global norms and urban forms in the age of tourism. London: : Routledge 2001. 191–211.https://contentstore.cla.co.uk//secure/link?id=697bfac5-5336-e711-80c9-005056af4099
47
Psarra S. Victorian Knowledge. In: Architecture and narrative: the formation of space and cultural meaning. London: : Routledge 2009. 137–58.https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://shib-idp.ucl.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9780203639672
48
Rosenblatt A. Building type basics for museums. New York: : Wiley 2001.
49
Roth LM. Understanding architecture: its elements, history and meaning. London: : Herbert Press 1994.
50
Samuel R, Light A, Alexander S, et al. Theatres of memory. London: : Verso 1994.
51
Selwyn T. The tourist image: myths and myth making in tourism. Chichester: : John Wiley 1996.
52
Susanna Sirefman. Formed and Forming: Contemporary Museum Architecture. Daedalus 1999;128:297–320.http://www.jstor.org/stable/20027576?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
53
Smith L. Uses of heritage. London: : Routledge 2006.
54
Steffensen-Bruce IA. Marble palaces, temples of art: art museums, architecture, and American culture, 1890-1930. Lewisburg: : Bucknell University Press 1998.
55
Tilley C. Space, place, landscape and perception: phenomenological perspectives. In: A phenomenology of landscape: places, paths, and monuments. Oxford: : Berg 1994. 7–34.https://contentstore.cla.co.uk//secure/link?id=ddccf3fc-7136-e711-80c9-005056af4099
56
Travlou P. Go Athens: A Journey to the Centre of the City. In: Tourism: between place and performance. New York: : Berghahn Books 2002.
57
Turner VW, Turner ELB. Image and pilgrimage in Christian culture: anthropological perspectives. New York: : Columbia University Press 1978.
58
Urry J. How Societies remember the Past. In: Theorizing museums: representing identity and diversity in a changing world. Oxford: : Blackwell 1996. 45–65.https://contentstore.cla.co.uk//secure/link?id=e23535b8-5e36-e711-80c9-005056af4099
59
Vergo P. The new museology. London: : Reaktion 1989. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9781861896704
60
Kevin Walsh. The Representation of the Past. Taylor & Francis 1992. doi:10.4324/9780203075722
61
Waterton E, Watson S. The semiotics of heritage tourism. Bristol: : Channel View Publications 2014.
62
Witcomb A. Re-imagining the museum: beyond the mausoleum. London: : Routledge 2003.
63
Wright P. On living in an old country: the national past in contemporary Britain. London: : Verso 1985.
64
Yanni C. Nature’s museums: Victorian science and the architecture of display. Baltimore: : John Hopkins University Press 1999.
65
Zolberg VL. ‘An Elite Experience for Everyone’: Art Museums, the Public, and Cultural Literacy’. In: Museum culture: histories, discourses, spectacles. London: : Routledge 1994.
66
Tucker H, Carnegie E. World heritage and the contradictions of ‘universal value’. Annals of Tourism Research 2014;47:63–76. doi:10.1016/j.annals.2014.04.003
67
Byrne D. Chartering heritage in Asia’s postmodern world. Getty Conservation Institute Newsletter 2004;19.http://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/newsletters/19_2/news_in_cons1.html
68
Barthel-Bouchier D, Hui MM. Places of Cosmopolitan Memory. Globality Studies Journal (GSJ) 2007;5.https://gsj.stonybrook.edu/article/places-of-cosmopolitan-memory/
69
Ulrich Beck. The Cosmopolitan Perspective: Sociology of the Second Age of Modernity. The British Journal of Sociology 2000;51:79–105.http://www.jstor.org/stable/592028
70
Bernal M. Black Athena: the Afroasiatic roots of classical civilization, Vol.1: The fabrication of Ancient Greece, 1785-1985. London: : Free Association Books 1987.
71
Boym S. The Future of Nostalgia. New York: : BasicBooks 2001.
72
Butler B. Heritage and the Present Past. In: Tilley C, ed. Handbook of Material Culture. London: : SAGE 2006. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9781446206430
73
Butler B. Return to Alexandria: an ethnography of cultural heritage, revivalism, and museum memory. Walnut Creek, Calif: : Left Coast Press 2007.
74
Cleere H. Cultural landscapes as World Heritage. Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites 1995;1:63–8. doi:10.1179/135050395793137171
75
Cleere H. The concept of ‘outstanding universal value’ in the World Heritage Convention. Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites 1996;1:227–33. doi:10.1179/135050396793139042
76
H. Cleere. The World Heritage Convention in the Third World. In: Cultural resource management in contemporary society: perspectives on managing and presenting the past. London: : Routledge 2000. 99–106.https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://shib-idp.ucl.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9780203208779
77
Cleere H. Uneasy Bedfellows: Universality and Cultural Heritage. In: Destruction and conservation of cultural property. London: : Routledge 2001. 22–9.
78
Conil-Lacoste M. The story of a grand design: Unesco 1946-1993, people, events and achievements. Paris: : Unesco Publishing 1994.
79
Crane SA. Museums and memory. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 2000.
80
Veronica Della Dora. The rhetoric of nostalgia: postcolonial Alexandria between uncanny memories and global geographies. Cultural Geographies 2006;13:207–38.http://search.proquest.com/docview/200863737/761CCA9D2138430APQ/3?accountid=14511
81
Evans J, Boswell D, Open University. Representing the nation: a reader : histories, heritage and museums. London: : Routledge in association with the Open University 1999.
82
De Jong F, Rowlands MJ. Reclaiming heritage: alternative imaginaries of memory in West Africa. Walnut Creek, Calif: : Left Coast Press 2007.
83
Fontein J. The silence of Great Zimbabwe: contested landscapes and the power of heritage. [London]: : UCL Press 2006.
84
Freud S. A Disturbance of Memory on the Acropolis. In: On metapsychology: the theory of psychoanalysis : Beyond the pleasure principle, The ego and the id and other works. Harmondsworth: : Penguin 1991.
85
Gillis JR. Memory and Identity: The history of a relationship. In: Commemorations: the politics of national identity. Princeton, N.J: : Princeton University Press 1994. 3–24.
86
Thomas Hylland Eriksen. Between universalism and relativism: a critique of the UNESCO concept of culture. In: Culture and Rights: Anthropological Perspectives. Cambridge University Press 2012. 127–48.http://ebooks.cambridge.org/ebook.jsf?bid=CBO9780511804687
87
Ingold T. Key debates in anthropology. London: : Routledge 1996.
88
Jones S. Experiencing Authenticity at Heritage Sites: Some Implications for Heritage Management and Conservation. Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites 2009;11:133–47. doi:10.1179/175355210X12670102063661
89
Siân Jones. Monuments, memory and identity: exploring the social value of space. Con Bull 63 layout - https://content.historicengland.org.uk/images-books/publications/conservation-bulletin-63/cb-63-pp-15-27.pdf/ 2010;63:22–4.https://content.historicengland.org.uk/images-books/publications/conservation-bulletin-63/cb-63-pp-15-27.pdf/
90
Jones S. Negotiating Authentic Objects and Authentic Selves: Beyond the Deconstruction of Authenticity. Journal of Material Culture 2010;15:181–203. doi:10.1177/1359183510364074
91
Joy C. The politics of heritage management in Mali: from UNESCO to Djenné. Walnut Creek, Calif: : Left Coast Press 2012.
92
Kavanagh G. Dream spaces: memory and the museum. Leicester: : Leicester University Press 2000.
93
King TF. Our unprotected heritage: whitewashing the destruction of our natural and cultural environment. Walnut Creek, Calif: : Left Coast Press 2009.
94
Kreps CF. Liberating culture: cross-cultural perspectives on museums, curation, and heritage preservation. London: : Routledge 2003. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9780203389980
95
Labadi S, Long C. Heritage and globalisation. Abingdon: : Routledge 2010.
96
Conil-Lacoste M. The story of a grand design: Unesco 1946-1993, people, events and achievements. Paris: : Unesco Publishing 1994.
97
Legg, Stephen. Memory and nostalgia. Cultural Geographies 2004;11:99–107.http://search.proquest.com/docview/200958091/50D7D78C153B49EEPQ/8?accountid=14511
98
Lévi-Strauss C. Structural anthropology: Vol. 2. Allen Lane 1977.
99
David Lowenthal. Past Time, Present Place: Landscape and Memory. Geographical Review 1975;65:1–36.http://www.jstor.org/stable/213831?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
100
Lowenthal D. The past is a foreign country. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 1985.
101
Maleuvre D. Museum memories: history, technology, art. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University. Press 1999.
102
McBryde I. The ambiguities of authenticity – rock of faith or shifting sands? Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites 1997;2:93–100. doi:10.1179/cma.1997.2.2.93
103
Lynn Meskell. Human Rights and Heritage Ethics. Anthropological Quarterly 2010;83:839–59.http://www.jstor.org/stable/40890841?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
104
Pierre Nora. Between Memory and History: Les Lieux de Mémoire. Representations 1989;:7–24.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2928520?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
105
Norman K. Should the UK be nominating More World Heritage Sites? Present Pasts 2011;3. doi:10.5334/pp.49
106
O’Neill M. Enlightenment Museums - universal or merely global?, Museums and Society. Museum and society 2004;2:190–202.http://www2.le.ac.uk/departments/museumstudies/museumsociety/documents/volumes/oneill.pdf
107
Prosler M. Museums and Globalisation. In: Theorizing museums: representing identity and diversity in a changing world. Oxford: : Blackwell 1996. 21–44.
108
Rectanus MW. Globalization: Incorporating the Mueseum. In: A companion to museum studies. Malden, Mass: : Blackwell 2006. 381–97.https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://shib-idp.ucl.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9781405157292
109
Starobinski J, Kemp WS. The Idea of Nostalgia. Diogenes 1966;14:81–103. doi:10.1177/039219216601405405
110
Titchen SM. On the construction of ‘outstanding universal value’: Some comments on the implementation of the 1972 UNESCO World Heritage Convention. Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites 1996;1:235–42. doi:10.1179/135050396793138971
111
Winter T, Daly P. Routledge handbook of heritage in Asia. London: : Routledge 2010. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9780203156001
112
Adorno et al T. Valery-Proust museum. In: Prisms. Cambridge, Mass: : MIT Press 1967. 173–85.https://contentstore.cla.co.uk/secure/link?id=dd5746de-350c-e811-80cd-005056af4099
113
Benjamin W. The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction. In: Illuminations. London: : Pimlico 1999. 219–53.https://contentstore.cla.co.uk//secure/link?id=89b96adf-6236-e711-80c9-005056af4099
114
Mills R. Theorizing the Queer Museum. Museums & Social Issues 2008;3:41–52. doi:10.1179/msi.2008.3.1.41
115
Curran S. towards queer: ‘The village folk had a lot to say about it’ - a sound piece for Mary Lobb. 2015.http://towardsqueer.blogspot.co.uk/2015/01/the-village-folk-had-lot-to-say-about.html
116
Arondekar A. In the Absence of Reliable Ghosts: Sexuality, Historiography, South Asia. differences 2014;25:98–122. doi:10.1215/10407391-2847964
117
Blackmore C. How to Queer the Past Without Sex: Queer Theory, Feminisms and the Archaeology of Identity. Archaeologies 2011;7:75–96. doi:10.1007/s11759-011-9157-9
118
Blair Carole, Michel Neil. The AIDS Memorial Quilt and the Contemporary Culture of Public Commemoration. Rhetoric & Public Affairs 2008;10:595–626. doi:10.1353/rap.2008.0024
119
Eng DL, Halberstam J, Muñoz JE. What’s Queer About Queer Studies Now? Social Text 2005;23:1–17. doi:10.1215/01642472-23-3-4_84-85-1
120
Muñoz JE. Ephemera as Evidence: Introductory Notes to Queer Acts. Women & Performance: a journal of feminist theory 1996;8:5–16. doi:10.1080/07407709608571228
121
Matthew Smith. The Art of Unravelling the Past. Engage;:72–8.http://ucl-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/primo_library/libweb/action/display.do?tabs=detailsTab&ct=display&fn=search&doc=TN_proquest1328500355&indx=3&recIds=TN_proquest1328500355&recIdxs=2&elementId=2&renderMode=poppedOut&displayMode=full&frbrVersion=&frbg=&&dscnt=0&scp.scps=scope%3A%28UCL%29%2Cprimo_central_multiple_fe&tb=t&mode=Basic&vid=UCL_VU1&srt=rank&tab=local&dum=true&vl(freeText0)=smith%20art%20of%20unraveling%20the%20past&dstmp=1474643152798
122
Samuel J. M. M. Alberti. Objects and the Museum. Isis 2005;96:559–71.http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/498593
123
Appadurai A, editor. The social life of things: commodities in cultural perspective. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 1986.
124
Arnold K, Olsen D. Illustrations from the Wellcome Collections. Medicine Man: The Forgotten Museum of Henry Wellcome. Medical History 2012;47:369–81.http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=8630927&fulltextType=RA&fileId=S0025727300057069
125
Basu P, Coleman S. Introduction: Migrant Worlds, Material Cultures. Mobilities 2008;3:313–30. doi:10.1080/17450100802376753
126
Baudrillard J. The System of Collecting. In: The cultures of collecting. London: : Reaktion Books 1994. 7–24.
127
Bazin G. the Museum Age. In: Museum studies: an anthology of contexts. Malden, MA: 2004. 15–20.
128
Belk RW. Collecting in a consumer society. London: : Routledge 1995.
129
Benjamin W. Unpacking my Library - A talk about book collecting. In: Illuminations. London: : Pimlico 1999. 61–9.
130
Bennett T. The birth of the museum: history, theory, politics. London: : Routledge 1995. http://UCL.eblib.com/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=1487028
131
Blegvad P. The Phantom Museum and Henry Wellcome’s collection of medical curiosities. London: : Profile Books 2003.
132
Bujok E. Ethnographica in early modern Kunstkammern and their perception. Journal of the History of Collections 2009;21:17–32. doi:10.1093/jhc/fhn031
133
Butler B. Collectors, Crusaders, Carers, and Tourist Networks in Possessing Mandate Palestine. Public Archaeology 2012;11:235–60. doi:10.1179/1465518713Z.00000000022
134
Butler B. "Three concepts”—Hospitality, cosmopolitanism, and human dignity: Reconceptualising heritage futures. Archaeologies 2006;2:67–79. doi:10.1007/s11759-006-0015-0
135
Butler B. The Man who would be Moses. In: A future for archaeology: the past in the present. London: : UCL Press 2006. 97–107.
136
Clifford J. On collecting art and culture. In: The predicament of culture: twentieth-century ethnography, literature, and art. Cambridge, Mass: : Harvard University Press 1988. 215–50.
137
Clifford J. The predicament of culture: twentieth-century ethnography, literature, and art. Cambridge, Mass: : Harvard University Press 1988.
138
Cole D. Captured heritage: the scramble for Northwest Coast artifacts. Vancouver: : Douglas & McIntyre 1985.
139
Derrida J. Ethics, institutions, and the right to philosophy. Lanham, Md: : Rowman & Littlefield 2002.
140
Derrida J. On Cosmopolitanism and Forgiveness. London: : Routledge 2001.
141
Derrida J, Prenowitz E. Archive fever: a Freudian impression. Chicago: : University of Chicago Press 1996.
142
Dudley SH. Museum materialities: objects, engagements, interpretations. London: : Routledge 2010. http://www.tandfebooks.com/isbn/9780203523018
143
Edwards E. Mixed box: the cultural biography of a box of ‘ethnographic’ photographs. In: Photographs objects histories: on the materiality of images. London: : Routledge 2004. 47–61.http://www.tandfebooks.com/isbn/9780203506493
144
Elsner J, Cardinal R. The cultures of collecting. London: : Reaktion Books 1994.
145
FINDLEN P. THE MUSEUM: ITS CLASSICAL ETYMOLOGY AND RENAISSANCE GENEALOGY. Journal of the History of Collections 1989;1:59–78. doi:10.1093/jhc/1.1.59
146
Forrester J. ‘Mille e tre’: Freud and Collecting. In: The cultures of collecting. London: : Reaktion Books 1994. 59–78.
147
Garrow D, Shove E. Artefacts between disciplines. The toothbrush and the axe. Archaeological Dialogues 2007;14. doi:10.1017/S1380203807002267
148
Gosden C, Knowles C. Collecting colonialism: material culture and colonial change. Oxford: : Berg 2001.
149
Holdaway D, Trentin F. Roman Fever: Anarchiving Eternal Rome, from Roman Holiday to Petrolio. Journal of Romance Studies 2014;14. doi:10.3167/jrs.2014.140302
150
Gosden C, Larson F, Petch A. Knowing things: exploring the collections at the Pitt Rivers Museum 1884-1945. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 2007.
151
Henning M. Museums, media and cultural theory. Maidenhead: : Open University Press 2006. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9780335225750
152
Hicks D, Beaudry MC. The Oxford handbook of material culture studies. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 2010. http://www.oxfordhandbooks.com/view/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199218714.001.0001/oxfordhb-9780199218714
153
Hoskins J. Agency, biography and objects. In: Handbook of material culture. London: : SAGE 2006. 74–84.https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://shib-idp.ucl.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9781446206430
154
Kavanagh G. Museum languages: objects and texts. Leicester: : Leicester University Press 1991.
155
Kirshenblatt-Gimblett B. Objects of ethnography. In: Exhibiting cultures: the poetics and politics of museum display. Washington, D.C: : Smithsonian Institution Press 1991. 386–443.
156
Knell S. Altered values: searching for a new collecting. In: Museums and the future of collecting. Aldershot: : Ashgate 2004. 1–46.
157
Macdonald S, Wiley InterScience (Online service). A companion to museum studies. Malden, MA: : Blackwell Pub 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9780470996836
158
MacGregor A. Curiosity and enlightenment: collectors and collections from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century. New Haven: : Yale University Press 2007.
159
MacGregor A, Ashmolean Museum. Tradescant’s rarities: essays on the foundation of the Ashmolean Museum, 1683, with a catalogue of the surviving early collections. Oxford: : Clarendon Press 1983.
160
Maleuvre D. Museum memories: history, technology, art. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University. Press 1999.
161
McAlpine A, MacGregor A. Sir Hans Sloane: collector, scientist, antiquary, founding father of the British Museum. London: : British Museum Press in association with Alistair McAlpine 1994.
162
Messenger PM, Fagan BM. The ethics of collecting cultural property: whose culture? whose property? 2nd ed., updated and enl. Albuquerque, N.M.: : University of New Mexico Press 1999.
163
Miller D. The comfort of things. Cambridge: : Polity 2008. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9780745673851
164
Miller D. Artefacts and the meaning of things. In: Museums in the material world. London: : Routledge 2007. 166–86.https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://shib-idp.ucl.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9780203946855
165
Moore K. Museums and popular culture. London: : Leicester University Press 1997.
166
Myers FR. The empire of things: regimes of value and material culture. Santa Fe, N.M.: : School of American Research Press 2001.
167
Olmi G. Science, Honour-metaphor: Italian cabinets of curiosity of the 16th and 17th centuries. In: The Origins of museums: the cabinet of curiosities in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Europe. Oxford: : Clarendon 1985. 5–16.
168
Pearce SM. Collecting Reconsidered. In: Pearce SM, ed. Interpreting Objects and Collections. London: : Routledge 1994. 193–204.http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9780203428276
169
Pearce SM. On collecting: an investigation into collecting in the European tradition. London: : Routledge 1995.
170
Pearce SM. Collecting reconsidered. In: Museum languages: objects and texts. Leicester: : Leicester University Press 1991. 135–53.https://contentstore.cla.co.uk//secure/link?id=38478ff4-6436-e711-80c9-005056af4099
171
Pomian K, Wiles-Portier E. Collectors and curiosities: Paris and Venice, 1500-1800. Cambridge: : Polity Press 1990.
172
Price S. Primitive art in civilized places. 2nd ed., with a new afterword. Chicago: : University of Chicago Press 2001.
173
Rapaport H. Later Derrida: reading the recent work. New York: : Routledge 2003.
174
Said EW, Bollas C, Rose J, et al. Freud and the non-European. London: : Verso 2003.
175
Schildkrout E, Keim CA. The scramble for art in Central Africa. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 1998.
176
SCHULZ E. NOTES ON THE HISTORY OF COLLECTING AND OF MUSEUMS: In the Light of Selected Literature of the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century. Journal of the History of Collections 1990;2:205–18. doi:10.1093/jhc/2.2.205
177
Shelton A. Museum ethnography: an imperial science. In: Cultural encounters: representing ‘otherness’. London: : Routledge 2000. 155–93.https://contentstore.cla.co.uk//secure/link?id=a43bcd5b-5336-e711-80c9-005056af4099
178
Shelton A. Museums and Anthropolgies: practices and narratives. In: A companion to museum studies. Malden, MA: : Blackwell Pub 2006. 64–80.http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9780470996836
179
Shelton A. The Collector’s Zeal: Towards an Anthropology of Intentionality, Instrumentality, and Desire. In: Colonial collections revisited. Leiden: : CNWS Publications 2007. 16–44.
180
Shelton A, Universidade de Coimbra. Collectors: expressions of self and other. London: : Horniman Museum and Gardens 2001.
181
Shelton A. Collectors: individuals and insitutions. London: : Horniman Museum and Gardens 2001.
182
Stewart S. Objects of Desire. In: On longing: narratives of the miniature, the gigantic, the souvenir, the collection. Durham: : Duke University Press 1993. 132–69. doi:10.1215/9780822378563-005
183
Stocking GW. Objects and others: essays on museums and material culture. Madison, Wis: : University of Wisconsin Press 1985. http://muse.jhu.edu/books/9780299103231/
184
Street BV, Hallam E. Cultural encounters: representing ‘otherness’. London: : Routledge 2000.
185
Elsner J, Cardinal R. Licensed Curiosity: Cook’s Pacific Voyages. In: The cultures of collecting. London: : Reaktion Books 1994. 116–36.
186
Thomas N. Entangled objects: exchange, material culture, and colonialism in the Pacific. Cambridge, Mass: : Harvard University Press 1991.
187
Welsch RL, O’Hanlon M. Hunting the gatherers: ethnographic collectors, agents and agency in Melanesia, 1870s-1930s. New York: : Berghahn 2000.
188
T. M. Orientalism and the Exhibitionary Order. In: Art of Art History. Oxford University Press 1989. 409–23.http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/ucl/reader.action?docID=453635&ppg=418
189
Drake J. Expanding #ArchivesForBlackLives to Traditional Archival Repositories. 2016.https://medium.com/on-archivy/expanding-archivesforblacklives-to-traditional-archival-repositories-b88641e2daf6?swoff=true
190
Bennett T. The Formation of the Museum. In: The birth of the museum: history, theory, politics. London: : Routledge 1995. 17–58.http://UCL.eblib.com/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=1487028
191
T. Bennett. The Exhibitionary Complex. In: The birth of the museum: history, theory, politics. London: : Routledge 1995. http://UCL.eblib.com/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=1487028
192
Buzard J, Childers JW, Gillooly E. Victorian prism: refractions of the Crystal Palace. Charlottesville: : University of Virginia Press 2007.
193
Foucault M. Discipline and punish: the birth of the prison. New York: : Vintage Books 1979. http://www.aspresolver.com/aspresolver.asp?SOTH;S10021788
194
Gardner J. Five Rings: Enclosing the London 2012 Olympic Games. Papers from the Institute of Archaeology 2013;23. doi:10.5334/pia.427
195
Greenhalgh P. Ephemeral vistas: the Expositions Universelles, great exhibitions and world’s fairs, 1851-1939. Manchester: : Manchester University Press 1988.
196
Ames M. Cannibal tours, glass boxes and the politics of interpretation. In: Cannibal tours and glass boxes: the anthropology of museums. Vancouver: : UBC Press 1992. 139–50.https://contentstore.cla.co.uk//secure/link?id=3bc9c6ac-6b36-e711-80c9-005056af4099
197
Bal M. Exhibition as Film. In: Exhibition experiments. Malden, Mass: : Blackwell 2007. 71–93.https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://shib-idp.ucl.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9780470695364
198
Bal M. The Discourse of the Museum. In: Thinking about exhibitions. London: : Routledge 1996. 201–18.http://www.tandfebooks.com/isbn/9780203991534
199
Bal M. Narratology: introduction to the theory of narrative. 2nd ed. Toronto: : University of Toronto Press 1985.
200
Barringer TJ. South Kensington Museum and the colonial project. In: Colonialism and the object: empire, material culture and the museum. London: : Routledge 1998. 11–27.https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://shib-idp.ucl.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9780203350683
201
Basu P. The Labyrinthine Aesthetic in Contemporary Museum Design. In: Exhibition experiments. Malden, Mass: : Blackwell 2007. 47–70.https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://shib-idp.ucl.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9780470695364
202
Basu P, Macdonald S. Exhibition experiments. Malden, Mass: : Blackwell 2007. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9780470695364
203
Bhabha HK. The location of culture. London: : Routledge 2004.
204
Bolton L. Living and Dying: Ethnography, Class and Aesthetics in the British Museum. In: Museums and difference. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 2008. 330–53.https://contentstore.cla.co.uk//secure/link?id=251bf6db-4e36-e711-80c9-005056af4099
205
Bolton L. Resourcing Change: Fieldworkers, the Women’s Culture Project and the Vanuatu Cultural Centre. In: The future of indigenous museums: perspectives from the southwest Pacific. New York: : Berghahn Books 2007. 23–37.
206
Bolton L. The Museum as Cultural Agent: The Vanuatu Cultural Centre Extension Worker Program. In: South Pacific museums: experiments in culture. Clayton, Vic: : Monash University ePress 2006. 1–13.
207
Bouquet M. Thinking and Doing Otherwise: Anthropological Theory in Exhibitionary Practice. Ethnos 2000;65:217–36. doi:10.1080/00141840050076905
208
Bourdieu P. Distinction: a social critique of the judgement of taste. London: : Routledge & Kegan Paul 1984.
209
Boyle P, Haggerty KD. Spectacular Security: Mega-Events and the Security Complex. International Political Sociology 2009;3:257–74. doi:10.1111/j.1749-5687.2009.00075.x
210
Burton A, Baker M, Richardson B, et al. A grand design: the art of the Victoria and Albert Museum. London: : V & A with The Baltimore Museum of Art 1997.
211
Carr D. The promise of cultural institutions. Walnut Creek, CA: : AltaMira Press 2003.
212
Chakrabarty D. Provincializing Europe: postcolonial thought and historical difference. Reissue, with a new preface by the author. Princeton, N.J.: : Princeton University Press 2008. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9781400828654
213
Clifford J. Chapter 5 - Four Northwest Coast Museums: Travel Reflections. In: Routes: travel and translation in the late twentieth century. Cambridge, Mass: : Harvard University Press 1999. 107–46.
214
James Clifford. Museums as contact zones. In: Routes: travel and translation in the late twentieth century. Cambridge, Mass: : Harvard University Press 1999.
215
Coombes AE. Reinventing Africa: museums, material culture and popular imagination in late Victorian and Edwardian England. New Haven: : Yale University Press 1994.
216
Crimp D, Lawler L. On the museum’s ruins. Cambridge, Mass: : MIT 1993.
217
Crooke EM. Museums and community: ideas, issues and challenges. London: : Routledge 2007. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9780203371015
218
Dean D. Museum exhibition: theory and practice. London: : Routledge 1994. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9780203039366
219
Dellios A. Marginal or mainstream? Migrant centres as grassroots and official heritage. International Journal of Heritage Studies 2015;21:1068–83. doi:10.1080/13527258.2015.1066410
220
Foucault M. The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences. New York: : Pantheon Books 1970. http://solomon.soth.alexanderstreet.com/cgi-bin/asp/philo/soth/sourceidx.pl?sourceid=S10021787
221
Driver F, Gilbert D. Imperial cities: landscape, display and identity. Manchester: : Manchester University Press 1999.
222
Gilroy P. The black Atlantic: modernity and double consciousness. London: : Verso 1993.
223
Gilroy P. It Ain’t where you’re from, it’s where you’re At... Third Text 1991;5:3–16. doi:10.1080/09528829108576284
224
Greenberg R, Ferguson BW, Nairne S. Thinking about exhibitions. London: : Routledge 1996. http://www.tandfebooks.com/isbn/9780203991534
225
The Relational Museum. https://www.prm.ox.ac.uk/RelationalMuseum.html
226
Greenfield J. The return of cultural treasures. 3rd ed. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 2007.
227
Handler R. On having Culture: Nationalism and the Preservation of Quebec’s Patrimonie. In: Objects and others: essays on museums and material culture. Madison, Wis: : University of Wisconsin Press 1985. 236–46.http://muse.jhu.edu/books/9780299103231/
228
Hoffenberg PH. An empire on display: English, Indian, and Australian exhibitions from the Crystal Palace to the Great War. Berkeley: : University of California Press 2001.
229
Henderson A, Kaeppler AL. Exhibiting dilemmas: issues of representation at the Smithsonian. Washington, D.C: : Smithsonian Institution Press 1997.
230
Henning M. Museums, media and cultural theory. Maidenhead: : Open University Press 2006. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9780335225750
231
Herle A. Torres Strait Islanders Stories from an Exhibition. Ethnos 2000;65:253–74. doi:10.1080/00141840050076923
232
Hetherington K. The Utopics of Social Ordering: Stonehenge as a Museum without Walls. In: Theorizing museums: representing identity and diversity in a changing world. Oxford: : Blackwell 1996. 153–76.
233
Hobhouse H. The Crystal Palace and the Great Exhibition: art, science, and productive industry : a history of the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851. London: : Continuum 2004.
234
Hooper-Greenhill E. What is a Museum? In: Museums and the shaping of knowledge. London: : Routledge 1992. 1–22.https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://shib-idp.ucl.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9780203415825
235
Hooper-Greenhill E. Museum, media, message. London: : Routledge 1995. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9780203456514
236
Hudson K. How misleading does an ethnographic museum have to be? In: Exhibiting cultures: the poetics and politics of museum display. Washington, D.C: : Smithsonian Institution Press 1991. 457–64.
237
Genoways HH, Andrei MA. Museum origins: readings in early museum history and philosophy. Walnut Creek, Calif: : Left Coast Press 2008.
238
Impey OR, MacGregor A. The Origins of museums: the cabinet of curiosities in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Europe. Oxford: : Clarendon 1985.
239
Jacobs JM. Edge of empire: postcolonialism and the city. London: : Routledge 1996. http://UCL.eblib.com/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=180252
240
Kaplan FES. Exhibitions as Communicative Media. In: Museum, media, message. London: : Routledge 1995. 37–58.https://www.dawsonera.com/abstract/9780203456514
241
Karp I, Kreamer CM, Lavine S, et al. Museums and communities: the politics of public culture. Washington: : Smithsonian Institution Press 1992. http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=ip,shib&db=nlebk&AN=730702&site=ehost-live&scope=site
242
Rupprecht A. Making the difference: postcolonial theory and the politics of memory. In: Temporalities: autobiography and everyday life. Manchester: : Manchester University Press 2002.
243
Karp I, Lavine S, Smithsonian Institution. Exhibiting cultures: the poetics and politics of museum display. Washington, D.C: : Smithsonian Institution Press 1991.
244
Kinsey DC. Koh-i-Noor: Empire, Diamonds, and the Performance of British Material Culture. The Journal of British Studies 2009;48:391–419. doi:10.1086/596104
245
Kreps C. Changing the rules of the road: Post-Colonialism and the new ethics of museum anthropology. In: Routledge companion to museum ethics: redefining ethics for the twenty-first-century museum. London: : Routledge 2011. 70–84.https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://shib-idp.ucl.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9780203815465
246
Kreps CF. Liberating culture: cross-cultural perspectives on museums, curation, and heritage preservation. London: : Routledge 2003. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9780203389980
247
Watson SER, Macleod S, Knell SJ. Museum revolutions: how museums change and are changed. London: : Routledge 2007. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9780203932643
248
Latour B, Weibel P, Zentrum für Kunst und Medientechnologie Karlsruhe. Iconoclash: [beyond the image wars in science, religion and art]. [Karlsruhe]: : ZKM 2002.
249
Latour B, Weibel P, Zentrum für Kunst und Medientechnologie Karlsruhe. Making things public: atmospheres of democracy. Karlsruhe: : ZKM Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe 2005.
250
Smith L, Akagawa N. Intangible heritage. Abingdon: : Routledge 2009.
251
Levell N. Reproducing India: International Exhibitions and Victorian Tourism. In: Souvenirs: the material culture of tourism. Aldershot: : Ashgate 2000. 36–51.
252
Levin AK. Gender, sexuality and museums: a Routledge reader. London: : Routledge 2010. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9780203847770
253
Lidchi H. The Poetic and Politics of Exhibiting Other Cultures. In: Representation: cultural representations and signifying practices. London: : Sage in association with the Open University 1997. 119–219.
254
Macdonald S. Memorylands: heritage and identity in Europe today. London: : Routledge 2013. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9780203553336
255
Macdonald S. Exhibitions of Power and Powers of Exhibition. In: The politics of display: museums, science, culture. London: : Routledge 1997. 1–24.https://www.dawsonera.com/abstract/9780203838600
256
MacDonald S. Museums, national, postnational and transcultural identities. Museum and society 2003;1:1–16.http://www2.le.ac.uk/departments/museumstudies/museumsociety/volumes/volume1/volume1
257
Macdonald S. Behind the scenes at the Science Museum. Oxford: : Berg 2002.
258
MacLeod S. Civil disobedience and political agitation: the art museum as a site of protest in the early twentieth century. Museum and society 2006;5:44–57.http://www2.le.ac.uk/departments/museumstudies/museumsociety/volumes/volume5
259
Marshall NR. ‘A Dim World, Where Monsters Dwell’ The Spatial time of the Sydenham Crystal Palace Dinosaur Park. In: City of gold and mud: painting Victorian London. New Haven, Conn: : Yale University Press for the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British art 2012. 233–50.
260
Marstine J, Wiley InterScience (Online service). New museum theory and practice: an introduction. Malden, MA: : Blackwell 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9780470776230
261
Moser S. Designing antiquity: Owen Jones, ancient Egypt and the Crystal Palace. New Haven: : Yale University Press for the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art 2012.
262
Parry R. Museums in a digital age. London: : Routledge 2010. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9780203716083
263
Phillips RB. APEC at the Museum of Anthropology: The Politics of Site and the Poetics of Sight Bite. Ethnos 2000;65:172–94. doi:10.1080/00141840050076888
264
Phillips RB. Re-placing Objects: Historical Practices for the Second Museum Age. The Canadian Historical Review 2005;86:83–110.https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/canadian_historical_review/v086/86.1phillips.html
265
Pieterse JN. Multiculturalism and Museums: Discourse about Others in the Age of Globalization. Theory, Culture & Society 1997;14:123–46. doi:10.1177/026327697014004006
266
Pollock G. Un-Framing the Modern: Critical Space/Public Possibility. In: Museums after modernism: strategies of engagement. Malden, Mass: : Blackwell 2007. 1–39. doi:10.1002/9780470776636.ch1
267
Poulot D. Identity as self-discovery: the ecomuseum in France. In: Museum culture: histories, discourses, spectacles. London: : Routledge 1994. 66–84.
268
Sandell R, Dodd J, Garland-Thomson R. Re-presenting disability: activism and agency in the museum. London: : Routledge 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203521267
269
A. Shelton. Museums and Museum Displays. In: Handbook of material culture. London: : SAGE 2006. 480–99.https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://shib-idp.ucl.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9781446206430
270
Stanley N. Being ourselves for you: the global display of cultures. London: : Middlesex University Press 1998.
271
Haidy Geismar and Christopher Tilley. Negotiating Materiality: International and Local Museum Practices at the Vanuatu Cultural Centre and National Museum. Oceania 2003;73:170–88.http://www.jstor.org/stable/40331895?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
272
Tomlinson J. Globalised Culture: The Triumph of the West? In: The city cultures reader. London: : Routledge 2004.
273
Weibel P, Latour B. Experimenting with representation: Iconoclash and Making Things Public. In: Exhibition experiments. Malden, MA: : Blackwell Pub 2007. 94–109.http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9780470696118
274
Whitehead C. Museum architecture and moral improvement. In: The public art museum in nineteenth century Britain: the development of the National Gallery. Aldershot: : Ashgate 2005. 59–68.
275
Wilson F, Corrin LG, Berlin I, et al. Mining the museum: an installation. Baltimore: : The Contemporary in cooperation with the New Press, New York 1994.
276
Latour B. What is iconoclash? Or is there a world beyond the image wars? In: Iconoclash: [beyond the image wars in science, religion and art]. [Karlsruhe]: : ZKM 2002. 14–37.http://www.bruno-latour.fr/node/64
277
Holtorf C. Can less be more? Heritage in the age of terrorism. Public Archaeology 2006;5:101–9. doi:10.1179/pua.2006.5.2.101
278
Blacksin I. Contested Terrain in Afghanistan. Kyoto Journal Published Online First: 2013.http://www.kyotojournal.org/the-journal/culture-arts/contested-terrain-in-afghanistan/
279
Bernbeck R. Heritage Politics: Learning from Mullah Omar? In: Controlling the past, owning the future: the political uses of archaeology in the Middle East. Tucson: : University of Arizona Press 2010. 27–54.
280
Centlivres P. The Controversy over the Buddhas of Bamiyan. South Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal Published Online First: 2008.https://samaj.revues.org/992
281
Hamilakis Y. The "War on Terror” and the Military–Archaeology Complex: Iraq, Ethics, and Neo-Colonialism. Archaeologies 2009;5:39–65. doi:10.1007/s11759-009-9095-y
282
Hamilakis Y. Iraq, stewardship and ‘the record’: An ethical crisis for archaeology. Public Archaeology 2003;3:104–11. doi:10.1179/pua.2003.3.2.104
283
Harmanşah Ö. ISIS, Heritage, and the Spectacles of Destruction in the Global Media. Near Eastern Archaeology 2015;78:170–7.http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5615/neareastarch.78.3.0170
284
Holtorf C. Averting loss aversion in cultural heritage. International Journal of Heritage Studies 2015;21:405–21. doi:10.1080/13527258.2014.938766
285
Walasek H. Bosnia and the destruction of cultural heritage. Farnham: : Ashgate 2015.
286
C. Wyndham. Reconstructing Afghan Identity: Nation-building, International Relations and the Safeguarding of Afghanistan’s Buddhist Heritage. In: Museums, Heritage and International Development. Taylor & Francis 2014. 123–42. doi:10.4324/9780203069035
287
Adorno TW. Valery-Proust Museum. In: Prisms. Cambridge, Mass.: : MIT Press 1983. 173–85.https://contentstore.cla.co.uk//secure/link?id=720082ec-4e36-e711-80c9-005056af4099
288
Tunbridge JE, Ashworth GJ. Dissonant heritage: the management of the past as a resource in conflict. Chichester: : John Wiley 1995.
289
Augé M, Howe J. Non-places: introduction to an anthropology of supermodernity. London: : Verso 1995.
290
Barthel-Bouchier D. Communities of Conflict: intersection of the global and the local in Cyprus. Museum International 2010;62:37–41. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0033.2010.01712.x
291
Bender B, Aitken P. Stonehenge: making space. Oxford: : Berg 1998.
292
Bender B. Landscape: politics and perspectives. New York: : Berg 1993.
293
Benjamin W, Arendt H, Wieseltier S, et al. Illuminations. New York: : Schocken Books 2007.
294
Bevan R. The destruction of memory: architecture at war. London: : Reaktion 2006.
295
Byrne D. Western Hegemony in Archaeological Heritage Management. In: Fairclough GJ, Harrison R, Schofield J, et al., eds. The heritage reader. London: : Routledge 2008. 229–35.
296
Boldrick S, Clay R. Iconoclasm: contested objects, contested terms. Aldershot: : Ashgate 2007.
297
Bordage R. Sachsenhausen: a flawed museum. Museum International 2009;45:26–31. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0033.1993.tb01086.x
298
Boytner R, Dodd LS, Parker BJ. Controlling the past, owning the future: the political uses of archaeology in the Middle East. Tucson: : University of Arizona Press 2010.
299
Burstrom M. Garbage or heritage: Existential Dimension of a Car Cemetery. In: Contemporary archaeologies: excavating now. Frankfurt am Main: : Peter Lang 2009. 131–43.
300
Butler BJ. Egypt: Constructed Exiles of the Imagination. In: Bender B, Winer M, eds. Contested landscapes: movement, exile and place. Oxford: : Berg 2001. 303–18.
301
Mike Rowlands and Beverley Butler. Conflict and Heritage Care. Anthropology Today 2007;23:1–2.http://www.jstor.org/stable/4620327?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
302
Coombes AE. History after apartheid: visual culture and public memory in a democratic South Africa. Durham: : Duke University Press 2003.
303
Das V. Critical events: an anthropological perspective on contemporary India. Delhi: : Oxford University Press 1995.
304
Farmer S. Symbols that Face Two Ways: Commemorating the Victims of Nazism and Stalinism at Buchenwald and Sachsenhausen. Representations 1995;:97–119. doi:10.2307/2928751
305
Flood FB. Between Cult and Culture: Bamiyan, Islamic Iconoclasm, and the Museum. The Art Bulletin 2002;84. doi:10.2307/3177288
306
Bender B, Winer M. Contested landscapes: movement, exile and place. Oxford: : Berg 2001.
307
by Alfredo González‐Ruibal. Time to Destroy. Current Anthropology 2008;49:247–79.http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/526099
308
Gopal S. Anatomy of a confrontation: the rise of communal politics in India. London: : Zed 1993.
309
Graham Greene. The Destructors. In: Twenty-one stories (Greene). 1954.
310
Gregory D. Defiled cities. In: The colonial present: Afghanistan, Palestine, Iraq. Malden, MA: : Blackwell 2004. 107–43.https://contentstore.cla.co.uk//secure/link?id=c9d030b2-7e36-e711-80c9-005056af4099
311
Handler R. Nationalism and the politics of culture in Quebec. Madison, Wis: : University of Wisconsin Press 1988.
312
Hell J, Schönle A. Introduction to Ruins of Modernity. In: Hell J, Schönle A, Adams J, et al., eds. Ruins of Modernity. Duke University Press 2010. doi:10.1215/9780822390749
313
Hetherington K. The Utopics of Social Ordering - Stonehenge as a Museum without Walls. In: Theorizing museums: representing identity and diversity in a changing world. Oxford: : Blackwell 1996. 153–77.
314
Holtorf C. Is the Past a Non-Renewable Resource. In: Destruction and conservation of cultural property. London: : Routledge 2001. 286–97.
315
Huyssen A. Twilight memories: marking time in a culture of amnesia. New York: : Routledge 1995.
316
Huyssen A. Nostalgia for Ruins. Grey Room 2006;23:6–21. doi:10.1162/grey.2006.1.23.6
317
Andreas Huyssen. Authentic Ruins: Product of Modernity. In: Hell J, Schönle A, Adams J, et al., eds. Ruins of Modernity. Duke University Press 2010. doi:10.1215/9780822390749
318
James J. Recovering the German Nation: Heritage Restoration and the Search for Unity. In: Marketing heritage: archaeology and the consumption of the past. Walnut Creek, CA: : Altamira Press 2004. 143–65.
319
Keenan T. Like a Museum. In: The end(s) of the museum =: Els límits del museu. Barcelona: : Fundació Antoni Tàpies 1996.
320
Luke CM, Kersel MM. U.S. cultural diplomacy and archaeology: soft power, hard heritage. New York: : Routledge 2013.
321
Moshenka G. Unbuilt Heritage: Conceptualising Absences in the Historic Environment. In: The good, the bad and the unbuilt: handling the heritage of the recent past. Oxford: : Archaeopress 2012. 123–6.
322
Nelson RS, Olin MR. Monuments and memory, made and unmade. Chicago: : University of Chicago Press 2003.
323
Jeffrey K. Olick and Daniel Levy. Collective Memory and Cultural Constraint: Holocaust Myth and Rationality in German Politics. American Sociological Review 1997;62:921–36.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2657347?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
324
Papadakis Y, Peristianis N, Welz G. Divided Cyprus: modernity, history, and an island in conflict. Bloomington, Ind: : Indiana University Press 2006.
325
Patraka V. Spectacles of Suffering: Performing Presence, Absence, and Historical Memory at US Holocaust Museums. In: Performance and cultural politics. London: : Routledge 1996.
326
Ratnagar S. Introduction to Ayodhya: archaeology after demolition. In: Ayodhya: archaeology after demolition ; a critique of the ‘new’ and ‘fresh’ discoveries. New Delhi: : Orient Longman 1993. 1–15.
327
Rowlands M. Heritage and Cultural Property. In: Teaching Collection (Anthropology / ANTH1001): Photographic portraiture in central India in the 1980s and 1990s. 2002. 105–10.
328
Sahlins MD. Culture in practice: selected essays. New York: : Zone Books 2000.
329
Sahlins MD. Islands of history. Chicago, Ill: : University of Chicago Press 1985.
330
Schofield AJ, Cocroft W. A fearsome heritage: diverse legacies of the Cold War. Walnut Creek, Calif: : Left Coast Press 2007.
331
Sebald WG, Bell A. On the natural history of destruction. Modern Library pbk. ed. New York: : Modern Library 2004.
332
Smith L. Representing enslavement and abolition in museums: ambiguous engagements. New York: : Routledge 2011.
333
Verena Stolcke. Talking Culture: New Boundaries, New Rhetorics of Exclusion in Europe. Current Anthropology 1995;36:1–24.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2744220?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
334
Stone PG, Layton R, Thomas J. Destruction and conservation of cultural property. London: : Routledge 2001.
335
Varvantakis C. A monument to dismantlement. Memory Studies 2009;2:27–38. doi:10.1177/1750698008097393
336
Veer P van der. Religious nationalism: Hindus and Muslims in India. Berkeley, Calif: : University of California Press 1994.
337
Verdery K. The political lives of dead bodies: reburial and postsocialist change. New York: : Columbia University Press 1999.
338
Walsh MJ. Famagusta 2007:An Appeal for International Cooperation. In: Heritage at risk: ICOMOS world report 2000 on monuments and sites in danger. München: : Saur 2000. 50–6.
339
Walsh MJK. "The Vile Embroidery of Ruin”: Historic Famagusta between Ottoman and British Empires in Cyprus: 1878–1901. Journal of Intercultural Studies 2010;31:247–69. doi:10.1080/07256861003724581
340
Weizman E. The least of all possible evils: humanitarian violence from Arendt to Gaza. London: : Verso 2011.
341
Alivizatou M. Intangible Heritage and Erasure: Rethinking Cultural Preservation and Contemporary Museum Practice. International Journal of Cultural Property 2011;18:37–60. doi:10.1017/S094073911100004X
342
Pinder D. Sound, Memory and Interruption: ghosts of London’s M11 link road. In: Jordan SA, Lindner C, eds. Cities interrupted: visual culture and urban space. London: : Bloomsbury Academic 2016. 65–83.https://contentstore.cla.co.uk//secure/link?id=4a7054db-7c36-e711-80c9-005056af4099
343
Butler B. The Tree, the Tower and the Shaman: The Material Culture of Resistance of the No M11 Link Roads Protest of Wanstead and Leytonstone, London. Journal of Material Culture 1996;1:337–63. doi:10.1177/135918359600100304
344
Mitchell JP. Performance. In: Handbook of material culture. London: : SAGE 2006. 384–401.https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://shib-idp.ucl.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9781446206430
345
Aikawa-Faure N. From the Proclamation of Masterpieces to the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage. In: Intangible heritage. Abingdon: : Routledge 2009. 13–44.
346
Alivizatou M. The Paradoxes of Intangible Heritage. In: Safeguarding intangible cultural heritage. Woodbridge: : Boydell Press 2012. 9–22.
347
Aykan B. ‘Patenting’ Karagöz: UNESCO, nationalism and multinational intangible heritage. International Journal of Heritage Studies 2015;:1–13. doi:10.1080/13527258.2015.1041413
348
Benjamin J. Sound as Artefact. In: Reanimating industrial spaces: conducting memory work in post-industrial societies. Walnut Creek, California: : Left Coast Press 2015. 108–24.
349
Hafstein V. Intangible Heritage as a List: From Masterpieces to Representation. In: Intangible heritage. Abingdon: : Routledge 2009. 93–111.https://contentstore.cla.co.uk//secure/link?id=f05b205d-5536-e711-80c9-005056af4099
350
Müske J. Constructing Sonic Heritage: The Accumulation of Knowledge in the Context of Sound Archives. Journal of Ethnology and Folkloristics 2010;4:37–47.http://www.jef.ee/index.php/journal/article/view/4
351
Fairchild Ruggles D, Silverman H. From Tangible to Intangible Heritage. In: Intangible heritage embodied. New York: : Springer 2009. 1–14.http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-0072-2
352
Stoever-Ackerman J. Splicing the Sonic Color-Line: Tony Schwartz Remixes Postwar Nueva York. Social Text 2010;28:59–85. doi:10.1215/01642472-2009-060
353
Waldock J. Crossing the Boundaries: Sonic Composition and the Anthropological Gaze. The Senses and Society 2016;11:60–7. doi:10.1080/17458927.2016.1164429
354
Bille M. Assembling heritage: investigating the UNESCO proclamation of Bedouin intangible heritage in Jordan. International Journal of Heritage Studies 2012;18:107–23. doi:10.1080/13527258.2011.599853
355
Borden I. A Performative Critique of the City: The Urban Practice of Skateboarding, 1958-98. In: The city cultures reader. London: : Routledge 2004.
356
Brown MF. Heritage Trouble: Recent Work on the Protection of Intangible Cultural Property. International Journal of Cultural Property 2005;12. doi:10.1017/S0940739105050010
357
Churchill N. Dignifying Carnival: The Politics of Heritage Recognition in Puebla, Mexico. International Journal of Cultural Property 2006;13. doi:10.1017/S0940739106060012
358
Cleere H. Cultural landscapes as World Heritage. Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites 1995;1:63–8. doi:10.1179/135050395793137171
359
Cleere H. The concept of ‘outstanding universal value’ in the World Heritage Convention. Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites 1996;1:227–33. doi:10.1179/135050396793139042
360
Cleere H. The World Heritage Convention in the Third World. In: Cultural resource management in contemporary society: perspectives on managing and presenting the past. London: : Routledge 2000. 99–106.https://www.dawsonera.com/abstract/9780203208779
361
Conil-Lacoste M. The story of a grand design: Unesco 1946-1993, people, events and achievements. Paris: : Unesco Publishing 1994.
362
De Jong F. A Masterpiece of Masquerading: Contradictions of Conservation in Intangible Heritage. In: Reclaiming heritage: alternative imaginaries of memory in West Africa. Walnut Creek, Calif: : Left Coast Press 2007. 161–84.
363
Dorfman E. Intangible natural heritage: new perspectives on natural objects. New York: : Routledge 2012.
364
Dubisch J. Ch.10: Women, Perfomance, and Pilgrimage: Beyond Honour and Shame. In: In a different place: pilgrimage, gender, and politics at a Greek island shrine. Princeton, N.J.: : Princeton University Press 1995.
365
Fabian J. Time and the other: how anthropology makes its object. New York: : Columbia University Press 2002.
366
Holtorf C. Can less be more? Heritage in the Age of Terrorism. Public Archaeology 2006;5:101–10. doi:10.1179/pua.2006.5.2.101
367
Holtorf C. Is the Past a Non-Renewable Resource? In: Destruction and conservation of cultural property. London: : Routledge 2001. 286–97.
368
Hoskins J. Agency, Biography and Objects. In: Handbook of material culture. London: : SAGE 2006. 74–84.https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://shib-idp.ucl.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9781446206430
369
Jones K. Music in factories: a twentieth-century technique for control of the productive self. Social & Cultural Geography 2005;6:723–44. doi:10.1080/14649360500258229
370
Kirshenblatt-Gimblett B. Intangible Heritage as Metacultural Production1. Museum International 2004;56:52–65. doi:10.1111/j.1350-0775.2004.00458.x
371
McBryde I. The ambiguities of authenticity – rock of faith or shifting sands? Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites 1997;2:93–100. doi:10.1179/cma.1997.2.2.93
372
McCarthy C. Museums and Māori: heritage professionals, indigenous collections, current practice. Walnut Creek, CA: : Left Coast Press 2011.
373
Meneley A. Scared Sick or Silly. In: Illness and irony: on the ambiguity of suffering in culture. New York: : Berghahn Books 2004. 21–39.
374
Peter J.M. Nas. Masterpieces of Oral and Intangible Culture. Current Anthropology 2002;43:139–48.http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/338287
375
Parkin D. Mementoes as Transitional Objects in Human Displacement. Journal of Material Culture 1999;4:303–20.http://mcu.sagepub.com/content/4/3/303.abstract
376
Peake B. Noise. Cultural Studies 2016;30:78–105. doi:10.1080/09502386.2014.958176
377
Phelan P. Unmarked: the politics of performance. London: : Routledge 1992.
378
Stanley N. Being ourselves for you: the global display of cultures. London: : Middlesex University Press 1998.
379
Titchen SM. On the construction of ‘outstanding universal value’: Some comments on the implementation of the 1972 UNESCO World Heritage Convention. Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites 1996;1:235–42. doi:10.1179/135050396793138971
380
Québec Declaration on the Preservation of the Spirit of Place: Adopted at Québec, Canada, October 4th 2008. International Journal of Cultural Property 2008;15. doi:10.1017/S0940739108080430
381
Phillips RB. Exhibiting Africa after Modernism: Globalization, Pluralism, and the Persistent Paradigms of Art and Artifact. In: Pollock G, Zemans J, eds. Museums After Modernism. Oxford, UK: : Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2007. 80–103. doi:10.1002/9780470776636.ch4
382
Silverman H, Ruggles D. Cultural Heritage and Human Rights. In: Silverman H, Ruggles DF, eds. Cultural Heritage and Human Rights. New York, NY: : Springer New York 2007. 3–29. doi:10.1007/978-0-387-71313-7
383
Clarke C. From Theory to Practice: Exhibiting African Art in the Twenty-First Century. In: McClellan A, ed. Art and its Publics. Oxford, UK: : Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2003. 165–84. doi:10.1002/9780470775936.ch8
384
Clifford J, Marcus G. Introduction. In: Writing culture: the poetics and politics of ethnography. Berkeley, Calif: : University of California Press 1986. 1–26.
385
Harris C, O’Hanlon M. The future of the enthnographic museum. Anthropology Today 2013;29:8–12. doi:10.1111/1467-8322.12003
386
Hendry J. Reclaiming culture: indigenous people and self-representation. Basingstoke: : Palgrave Macmillan 2005.
387
Kreps C. Non-Western Models of Museums and Curation in Crosscultural Perspective. In: Macdonald S, ed. A Companion to Museum Studies. Malden, MA, USA: : Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2006. 457–72. doi:10.1002/9780470996836.ch28
388
Kalay YE, Kvan T, Affleck J. New heritage: new media and cultural heritage. London: : Routledge 2008. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9780203937884
389
Boast R. Return to Babel: Emergent Diversity, Digital Resources, and Local Knowledge. Information Society 2007;23:395–403.http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=ip,shib&db=bth&AN=27176119&site=ehost-live&scope=site
390
Chippendale C, Mowal Jarlai, et al. D. Repainting images on rock in Australia and the maintenance of Aboriginal culture. Antiquity 1988;62:690–6.http://search.proquest.com/docview/1293687263?accountid=14511
391
Peers LL, Brown AK. Museums and source communities: a Routledge reader. London: : Routledge 2003.
392
Brown MF. Can Culture Be Copyrighted? Current Anthropology 1998;39:193–222. doi:10.1086/204721
393
Colleyn J-P. Jean Rouch: An Anthropologist Ahead of His Time. American Anthropologist 2005;107:113–6. doi:10.1525/aa.2005.107.1.113
394
Coombe RJ. The cultural life of intellectual properties: authorship, appropriation, and the law. Durham, [N.C.]: : Duke University Press 1998.
395
Davis P. Places, cultural touchstones and the ecomuseum. In: Heritage, museums and galleries: an introductory reader. London: : Routledge 2005. 365–76.https://www.dawsonera.com/abstract/9780203326350
396
Duffek K, Townsend-Gault C. Bill Reid and beyond: expanding on modern Native art. Vancouver: : Douglas & McIntyre 2004.
397
Errington S. The death of authentic primitive art and other tales of progress. Berkeley, CA: : University of California Press 1998.
398
Friedman J. The Past in the Future: History and the Politics of Identity. American Anthropologist 1992;94:837–59. doi:10.1525/aa.1992.94.4.02a00040
399
Blundell G, Chippindale C, Smith B. Seeing and knowing: understanding rock art with and without ethnography. Walnut Creek, Calif: : Left Coast Press 2010.
400
Golvan C. Aboriginal art and copyright: the case for Johnny Bulun Bulun. European intellectual property review 1989;11:346–55.https://signon.thomsonreuters.com/federation/UKF?entityID=https://shib-idp.ucl.ac.uk/shibboleth&returnto=https://uk.practicallaw.thomsonreuters.com/Document/IB9813281E72111DA9D198AF4F85CA028/View/FullText.html?skipAnonymous=true
401
Hanson A. The Making of the Maori: Culture Invention and Its Logic. American Anthropologist 1989;91:890–902. doi:10.1525/aa.1989.91.4.02a00050
402
HARRISON S. Identity as a scarce resource*. Social Anthropology 2007;7:239–51. doi:10.1111/j.1469-8676.1999.tb00193.x
403
Hubert J, Fforde C. The reburial issue in the twenty first century. In: Heritage, museums and galleries: an introductory reader. London: : Routledge 2005. 107–21.https://www.dawsonera.com/abstract/9780203326350
404
Jenkins T. Contesting human remains in museum collections: the crisis of cultural authority. New York: : Routledge 2011.
405
Jonaitis A. Reconsidering the Northwest Coast Renaissance. In: Bill Reid and beyond: expanding on modern Native art. Vancouver: : Douglas & McIntyre 2004. 155–224.
406
Kramer J. Figurative Repatriation. Journal of Material Culture 2004;9:161–82. doi:10.1177/1359183504044370
407
Kreps CF. Liberating culture: cross-cultural perspectives on museums, curation, and heritage preservation. London: : Routledge 2003. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9780203389980
408
McCarthy C. Exhibiting Māori: a history of colonial cultures of display. Oxford: : Berg 2007.
409
Merrill W, Ahlborn R. Zuni archangels and Ahayu*da: A sculpted chronicle of power and identity. In: Exhibiting dilemmas: issues of representation at the Smithsonian. Washington, D.C: : Smithsonian Institution Press 1997. 176–205.
410
Merryman JH. Two Ways of Thinking About Cultural Property. The American Journal of International Law 1986;80. doi:10.2307/2202065
411
Palmer N. Museums and Cultural Property. In: The new museology. London: : Reaktion 1989. 172–204.https://www.dawsonera.com/abstract/9781861896704
412
Phillips RB. Trading identities: the souvenir in Native North American art from the Northeast, 1700-1900. Seattle: : University of Washington Press 1998.
413
Renshaw L. Exhuming loss: memory, materiality and mass graves of the Spanish Civil War. Walnut Creek, Calif: : Left Coast 2011.
414
Rowlands M. Cultural Rights and Wrongs: Uses of the Concept of Property. In: Property in question: value transformation in the global economy. Oxford: : Berg 2004. 207–26.
415
Schmidt PR. The Human Right to a Cultural Heritage - African Applications. In: Plundering Africa’s past. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 1996. 18–28.
416
Simpson MG. Making representations: museums in the post-colonial era. Rev. ed. London: : Routledge 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203713884
417
Singh K. Repatriation Without Patria: Repatriating for Tibet. Journal of Material Culture 2010;15:131–55. doi:10.1177/1359183510364079
418
Singh K. UNESCO and Cultural Rights. In: Cultural rights and wrongs: a collection of essays in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Paris: : Unesco 1998. 146–60.
419
STRATHERN M. Potential property. Intellectual rights and property in persons*. Social Anthropology 1996;4:17–32. doi:10.1111/j.1469-8676.1996.tb00311.x
420
Touraine A. Pour un contrat culturel. In: Où vont les valeurs : entretiens du XXIe siècle II. Paris: : Editions UNESCO 2004. 307–10.
421
Townsend-Gault C. Circulating Aboriginality. Journal of Material Culture 2004;9:183–202. doi:10.1177/1359183504044372
422
Weiner AB. Chapter 2: Inalienable Possessions: The Forgotten Dimension. In: Inalienable possessions: the paradox of keeping-while-giving. Berkeley: : University of California Press 1992. 23–43.
423
Lynn Meskell. Negative Heritage and Past Mastering in Archaeology. Anthropological Quarterly 2002;75:557–74.https://www.jstor.org/stable/3318204
424
Moshenska G. Charred churches or iron harvests?: Counter-monumentality and the commemoration of the London Blitz. Journal of Social Archaeology 2010;10:5–27. doi:10.1177/1469605309353122
425
Gieryn TF. Balancing acts: science, Enola Gay and history wars at the Smithsonian. In: The politics of display: museums, science, culture. London: : Routledge 1998. 197–228.https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://shib-idp.ucl.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9780203838600
426
James J. Undoing Trauma: Reconstructing the Church of Our Lady in Dresden. Ethos 2006;34:244–72. doi:10.1525/eth.2006.34.2.244
427
Moshenska G. Curated Ruins and the Endurance of Conflict Heritage. Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites 2015;17:77–90. doi:10.1179/1350503315Z.00000000095
428
Stone M. A memory in ruins? Public Archaeology 2004;3:131–44. doi:10.1179/pua.2004.3.3.131
429
James E. Young. The Counter-Monument: Memory against Itself in Germany Today. Critical Inquiry 1992;18:267–96.http://www.jstor.org/stable/1343784?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
430
Amadiume I. The politics of memory: truth, healing and social justice. London: : Zed Books 2000.
431
Antze P, Lambek M. Tense past: cultural essays in trauma and memory. New York: : Routledge 1996.
432
Benjamin A. Architecture of Hope: Daniel Liebskind’s Jewish Museum. In: Present hope: philosophy, architecture, Judaism. London: : Routledge 1997.
433
Brison SJ. Traumatic Narratives and the Remaking of the Self. In: Acts of memory: cultural recall in the present. Hanover, NH: : Dartmouth College 1999. 39–54.
434
M. Burström. More than a Sensitive Ear: What to Expect of a Professional Expert. In: Who needs experts?: counter-mapping cultural heritage. Farnham, Surry, UK: : Ashgate 2014. 101–12.http://UCL.eblib.com/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=1564278
435
Coetzee C, Nuttall S. Negotiating the past: the making of memory in South Africa. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 1998.
436
Coombes AE. Translating the Past: Apartheid Monuments in Post-Apartheid South Africa. In: Hybridity and its discontents: politics, science, culture. London: : Routledge 2000. 173–97.
437
Derrida J, Prenowitz E. Archive fever: a Freudian impression. Chicago: : University of Chicago Press 1996.
438
Douglas L. The Shrunken Head of Buchenwald: Icons of Atrocity at Nuremberg. Representations 1998;:39–64. doi:10.2307/2902917
439
Duffy TM. Museums of ‘Human Suffering’ and the struggle for Human Rights. In: Museum studies: an anthology of contexts. Malden, MA: 2004. 117–23.
440
Feuchtwang S. Reinscriptions: Commemorations, Restoration and the Interpersonal Transmission of Histories and Memories under Modern States in Asia and Europe. In: Memory and methodology. Oxford: : Berg 1999. 59–78.
441
Forty A, Küchler S. The art of forgetting. Oxford: : Berg 1999.
442
Freed JI. The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Assemblage Published Online First: June 1989. doi:10.2307/3171152
443
Freud S, Richards A, Strachey J. On metapsychology: the theory of psychoanalysis : Beyond the pleasure principle, The ego and the id and other works. Harmondsworth: : Penguin 1991.
444
García Düttmann A, Fundació Antoni Tàpies. The end(s) of the museum = Els límits del museu. Barcelona: : Fundació Antoni Tàpies 1996.
445
Guy S. Shadow Architectures: War, Memories, and Berlin’s Futures. In: Graham S, ed. Cities, War, and Terrorism. Malden, MA, USA: : Blackwell Publishing 2004. 75–92. doi:10.1002/9780470753033.ch4
446
Hirsch M. Surviving Images: Holocaust Photographs and the Work of Postmemory. The Yale Journal of Criticism 2001;14:5–37. doi:10.1353/yale.2001.0008
447
Hirsch M. Projected memory: Holocaust photographs. In: Acts of memory: cultural recall in the present. Hanover, NH: : Dartmouth College 1999. 3–23.
448
Hodgkin K, Radstone S. Contested pasts: the politics of memory. London: : Routledge 2003.
449
Hoskins J. Biographical objects: how things tell the stories of people’s lives. New York: : Routledge 1998.
450
Huyssen A. The Voids of Berlin. In: Present pasts: urban palimpsests and the politics of memory. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 2003. 49–71.
451
Huyssen A. Monumental Seduction. In: Acts of memory: cultural recall in the present. Hanover, NH: : Dartmouth College 1999. 191–207.
452
Huyssen A. Present pasts: media, politics, amnesia. In: Present pasts: urban palimpsests and the politics of memory. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 2003. 11–28.
453
Kwint M, Breward C, Aynsley J. Material memories. Oxford: : Berg 1999.
454
Lambek M, Antze P. Illness and irony: on the ambiguity of suffering in culture. New York: : Berghahn Books 2004.
455
Laub D. Truth and Testimony: The Process and the Struggle. In: Trauma: explorations in memory. Baltimore: : Johns Hopkins University Press 1995. 61–75.
456
Lennon JJ, Foley M. Dark tourism. London: : Continuum 2000.
457
McAtackney L. Peace maintenance and political messages: The significance of walls during and after the Northern Irish ‘Troubles’. Journal of Social Archaeology 2011;11:77–98. doi:10.1177/1469605310392321
458
Maiello A. Ethnic Conflict in Post-colonial India. In: The post-colonial question: common skies, divided horizons. London: : Routledge 1996. 99–114.
459
Moshenska G. Unbuilt Heritage: Conceptualising Absences in the Historic Environment. In: The good, the bad and the unbuilt: handling the heritage of the recent past. Oxford: : Archaeopress 2012. 123–6.
460
Patraka V. Spectacles of Suffering: Performing Presence, Absence, and Historical Memory at US Holocaust Museums. In: Performance and cultural politics. London: : Routledge 1996.
461
Phelan P. Unmarked: the politics of performance. London: : Routledge 1992.
462
Radstone S, Hodgkin K. Regimes of memory. London: : Routledge 2003.
463
Radstone S. Memory and methodology. Oxford: : Berg 1999.
464
Rapaport H. Later Derrida: reading the recent work. New York: : Routledge 2003.
465
Santner EL. History Beyond the Pleasure Principle: Some thoughts on the Representation of Trauma. In: Probing the limits of representation: Nazism and the ‘Final Solution’. Cambridge, Mass: : Harvard University Press 1992.
466
Santner EL. Stranded objects: mourning, memory, and film in postwar Germany. Ithaca, N.Y: : Cornell University Press 1990.
467
Scarry E. The body in pain: the making and unmaking of the world. New York: : Oxford University Press 1985.
468
Till KE. Wounded cities: Memory-work and a place-based ethics of care. Political Geography 2012;31:3–14. doi:10.1016/j.polgeo.2011.10.008
469
Uzzel D. Heritage that Hurts - Interpretation in a postmodern world. In: The heritage reader. London: : Routledge 2008. 502–13.
470
Wood N. Vectors of memory: legacies of trauma in postwar Europe. Oxford: : Berg 1999.
471
Young JE. At memory’s edge: after-images of the Holocaust in contemporary art and architecture. New Haven: : Yale University Press 2000.
472
Beverly Butler. Heritage as Pharmakon and the Muses as deconstruction: problematising curative museologies and heritage healing. In: The thing about museums: objects and experience, representation and contestation : essays in honour of professor Susan M. Pearce. Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon: : Routledge 2012. 354–71.http://ucl-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/UCL_VU1:LSCOP_UCL_LMS_DS:UCL_LMS_DS002693438
473
Orhan Pamuk. Hüzün – Melancholy – Tristesse of Istanbul. In: Andreas Huyssen, ed. Other Cities, Other Worlds: Urban Imaginaries in the Globalising Age. Duke University Press 2008. 289–306. doi:10.1215/9780822389361-013
474
Parkin D. Mementoes as Transitional Objects in Human Displacement. Journal of Material Culture 1999;4:303–20.http://mcu.sagepub.com/content/4/3/303.abstract
475
Basu P, Coleman S. Introduction: Migrant Worlds, Material Cultures. Mobilities 2008;3:313–30. doi:10.1080/17450100802376753
476
Basu P. Genealogy and heritage tourism in the Scottish diaspora. In: Highland homecomings: genealogy and heritage tourism in the Scottish diaspora. London: : Routledge 2007. 37–64.
477
Basu P. Route metaphors of ‘roots-tourism’ in the Scottish Highlands disapora. In: Reframing pilgrimage: cultures in motion. London: : Routledge 2004. 150–78.
478
Dyson L. Collecting Practices and Autobiography: the role of objects in the mnemonic landscape of a nation. In: Temporalities: autobiography and everyday life. Manchester: : Manchester University Press 2002.
479
Edwards E. Photographs as Objects of Memory. In: Material memories. Oxford: : Berg 1999.
480
Boniface P, Fowler PJ. Heritage and tourism in ‘the global village’. London: : Routledge 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203033685
481
Britton SG. The political economy of tourism in the third world. Annals of Tourism Research 1982;9:331–58. doi:10.1016/0160-7383(82)90018-4
482
Cohen E. Authenticity and commoditization in tourism. Annals of Tourism Research 1988;15:371–86. doi:10.1016/0160-7383(88)90028-X
483
Corbey R. Tribal art traffic: a chronicle of taste, trade and desire in colonial and post-colonial times. Amsterdam: : Royal Tropical Institute 2000.
484
Costa KA. Coach fellas: heritage and tourism in Ireland. Walnut Creek, CA: : Left Coast Press 2009.
485
Crick M. The Anthropologist as Tourist: an identity in question. In: International tourism: identity and change. London: : Sage Publications 1995. 205–23.
486
Enwezor O. Reframing the black subject ideology and fantasy in contemporary South African representation. Third Text 1997;11:21–40. doi:10.1080/09528829708576684
487
Errington S. The death of authentic primitive art and other tales of progress. Berkeley, CA: : University of California Press 1998.
488
Graburn NHH. The anthropology of tourism. Annals of Tourism Research 1983;10:9–33. doi:10.1016/0160-7383(83)90113-5
489
Graburn N, Graburn NHH. Ethnic and tourist arts: cultural expressions from the Fourth World. Berkeley: : Univ. of California Pr 1976.
490
Grewal I. Home and harem: nation, gender, empire, and the cultures of travel. Durham, NC: : Duke University Press 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9780822382003
491
Harrison D, Hitchcock M. The politics of world heritage: negotiating tourism and conservation. Clevedon: : Channel View Publications 2005.
492
Kingston S. The Essential Attitude: Authenticity in Primitive Art, Ethnographic Performances and Museums. Journal of Material Culture 1999;4:338–51.http://mcu.sagepub.com/content/4/3/338.abstract
493
Kinnaird V, Hall DR. Tourism: a gender analysis. Chichester: : John Wiley & Sons 1994.
494
Kwint M, Breward C, Aynsley J. Material memories. Oxford: : Berg 1999.
495
MacCannell D. Empty meeting grounds: the tourist papers. London: : Routledge 1992.
496
Meneley A. Scared Sick or Silly? In: Illness and irony: on the ambiguity of suffering in culture. New York: : Berghahn Books 2004. 21–39.
497
Morphy H. Aboriginal Art in a Global Context. In: Worlds apart: modernity through the prism of the local. London: : Routledge 1995. 211–40.
498
Myers FR. Painting culture: the making of an aboriginal high art. Durham [N.C.]: : Duke University Press 2002.
499
Phillips RB, Steiner CB. Unpacking culture: art and commodity in colonial and postcolonial worlds. Berkeley: : University of California Press 1999.
500
Phillips RB. Trading identities: the souvenir in Native North American art from the Northeast, 1700-1900. Seattle: : University of Washington Press 1998.
501
Pratt ML. Imperial eyes: travel writing and transculturation. London: : Routledge 1992.
502
Reed A. Of Routes and Roots: Paths for Understanding Diasporic Heritage. In: The Palgrave handbook of contemporary heritage research. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: : Palgrave Macmillan 2015. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/ucl/detail.action?docID=1953015
503
Rojek C. Indexing, Dragging and the Social Construction of Tourist Sights. In: Touring cultures: transformations of travel and theory. London: : Routledge 1997. 52–75.
504
Schramm K. African homecoming: pan-African ideology and contested heritage. Walnut Creek, Calif: : Left Coast Press 2010.
505
Selwyn T. Introduction. In: The tourist image: myths and myth making in tourism. Chichester: : John Wiley 1996. 1–33.
506
Smith VL, editor. Hosts and guests: the anthropology of tourism. Second edition. Philadelphia: : University of Pennsylvania Press 1989. http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/j.ctt3fhc8w
507
Journal of Material Culture. ;9:107–211.http://mcu.sagepub.com/content/9/2.toc
508
Brian Spooner. Weavers and Dealers: the authenticity of an oriental carpet. In: The social life of things: commodities in cultural perspective. Cambridge University Press 2013. 195–235.http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=acls;idno=heb32141.0001.001
509
Staiff R. Heritage and the Visual Arts. In: The Palgrave handbook of contemporary heritage research. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: : Palgrave Macmillan 2015. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/ucl/detail.action?docID=1953015
510
Steiner C. Authenticity, Repetition and Aesthetics of Seriality. In: Unpacking culture: art and commodity in colonial and postcolonial worlds. Berkeley: : University of California Press 1999. 87–103.
511
Steiner C. The Art of Trade: on the creation of value and authenticity in the African art market. In: The traffic in culture: refiguring art and anthropology. Berkeley: : University of California Press 1995. 151–66.
512
Steiner CB. African art in transit. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 1994.
513
Stotesbury JA. Time, History, Memory: photographic life narratives and the albums of strangers’. In: Temporalities: autobiography and everyday life. Manchester: : Manchester University Press 2002.
514
Thomas N. Possessions: indigenous art / colonial culture. London: : Thames & Hudson 1999.
515
Tilley C. Performing Culture in the Global Village. Critique of Anthropology 1997;17:67–89. doi:10.1177/0308275X9701700105
516
Timothy DJ, Boyd SW. Heritage tourism. Harlow: : Prentice Hall 2003.
517
Townsend-Gault C. Circulating Aboriginality. Journal of Material Culture 2004;9:183–202. doi:10.1177/1359183504044372
518
Proceedings of a round table Culture, tourism, development: crucial issues for the XXIst century. 1997.http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0010/001085/108539Eo.pdf
519
Urry J. Consuming places. London: : Routledge 1995.
520
Urry J, Theory, culture & society. The tourist gaze. 2nd ed. London: : SAGE 2002.
521
Vogel S, Ebong I, Beek WEA van, et al. Africa explores: 20th century African art. New York: : Center for African Art 1991.
522
Harrison R. Forgetting to remember, remembering to forget: late modern heritage practices, sustainability and the ‘crisis’ of accumulation of the past. International Journal of Heritage Studies 2013;19:579–95. doi:10.1080/13527258.2012.678371
523
Witcomb A, Buckley K. Engaging with the future of ‘critical heritage studies’: looking back in order to look forward. International Journal of Heritage Studies 2013;19:562–78. doi:10.1080/13527258.2013.818570
524
Ewa Domanska. The Material Presence of the Past. History and Theory 2006;45:337–48.http://www.jstor.org/stable/3874128?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
525
Eshun K. Further Considerations of Afrofuturism. CR: The New Centennial Review 2003;3:287–302. doi:10.1353/ncr.2003.0021
526
Haraway DJ. Simians, cyborgs, and women: the reinvention of nature. London: : Free Association 1991.
527
Holtorf C. Averting loss aversion in cultural heritage. International Journal of Heritage Studies 2015;21:405–21. doi:10.1080/13527258.2014.938766
528
Graves-Brown P, Harrison R, Piccini A. The Oxford handbook of the archaeology of the contemporary world. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 2013.
529
Holtorf C, Piccini A. Contemporary archaeologies: excavating now. Frankfurt am Main: : Peter Lang 2009.
530
Holtorf C, Fairclough G. The new heritage and re-shapings of the past. In: Reclaiming archaeology: beyond the tropes of modernity. London: : Routledge 2013. 197–210. doi:10.4324/9780203068632.ch15
531
Solli B, Burström M, Domanska E, et al. Some Reflections on Heritage and Archaeology in the Anthropocene. Norwegian Archaeological Review 2011;44:40–88. doi:10.1080/00293652.2011.572677
532
Schofield J. Who needs experts?: counter-mapping cultural heritage. Farnham: : Ashgate 2014.
533
Preziosi D. Art of Art History. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 2009. http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/ucl/reader.action?docID=453635&ppg=418