2002
DOI: 10.1080/00420980220128426
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Heritage as Knowledge: Capital or Culture?

Abstract: This paper discusses the relationships between heritage and the knowledge-based city. Heritage itself is conceptualised as the meanings attached in the present to the past and is regarded as a knowledge defined within social, political and cultural contexts. It is admitted, however, that there is relatively little research in this area and that the role of heritage in the knowledge economy still has to be adequately articulated. The discussion points to the complex conflicts inherent within heritage due to it … Show more

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Cited by 345 publications
(257 citation statements)
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“…S tem pa se proučevanje in ohranjanje dediščine približa vedam, ki se ukvarjajo s konstrukcijo znanja in oblikovanjem identitete. Za raziskovalce postanejo zanimive vse vrste znanja (Graham, 2002), načini delovanja skupnosti (Muršič, 2005), vsakdanje življenje in spreminjanje identitet. Takšen pristop se povezuje tudi s poststrukturalističnimi interpretacijami učenja, ki izhajajo iz semiotskih sistemov in konstrukcije pomenov.…”
Section: Opis Okolja Raziskaveunclassified
“…S tem pa se proučevanje in ohranjanje dediščine približa vedam, ki se ukvarjajo s konstrukcijo znanja in oblikovanjem identitete. Za raziskovalce postanejo zanimive vse vrste znanja (Graham, 2002), načini delovanja skupnosti (Muršič, 2005), vsakdanje življenje in spreminjanje identitet. Takšen pristop se povezuje tudi s poststrukturalističnimi interpretacijami učenja, ki izhajajo iz semiotskih sistemov in konstrukcije pomenov.…”
Section: Opis Okolja Raziskaveunclassified
“…Here, the On the subject of city image, Graham (2002) has stated that the subject of city marketing is actually not the city per se but the idea or image of the city, which comprises the information that has been conveyed and successfully received by the recipient. According to Graham, there are actually two "cities" that co-exist in the idea of the "city": one is the "external city", that is, the distinguishing marks of the city, such as its buildings or landmarks.…”
Section: Figure 1 City Image Differentiation Hierarchy Diagrammentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The image of the walled town frozen in time is given official recognition in UNESCO's inscription of the 'Museum City of Gjirokastra', for example, and exemplified by places such as Quedlinburg and Urbino. At worst, the nurturing of walled enclaves as branded heritage quarters can transform local communities into incidental players on 'stage sets' where heritage is commodified for economic exchange -a criticism levelled at the World Heritage Sites of Brugge and Carcassonne, for example (see Graham 2002Graham : 1007.…”
Section: Conservation and Contestationmentioning
confidence: 99%