Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Notes on Contributors -- Acknowledgements -- List of Abbreviations -- 1 Introduction: A Visual Heritage -- Part I Relocating the Visual -- 2 Inside/Outside: Ways of Seeing the World -- 3 People-Place-Past: The Visitor Experience of Cultural Heritage -- 4 The Perpetual Performance and Emergence of Heritage -- Part II Representation and Substitution -- 5 The Popular Memory of the Western Front: Archaeology and European Heritage -- 6 Historiography and Virtuality
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Introduction: Heritage as a Focus of Research -- Past, Present and New Directions -- Emma Waterton and Steve Watson PART I: HERITAGE MEANINGS 1. Heritage Methods and Methodologies -- Emma Waterton and Steve Watson 2. Heritage and Discourse -- Zongjie Wu and Song Hou 3. Heritage as Performance -- Michael Haldrup and Jorgen Ole Baerenholdt 4. Heritage and Authenticity -- Helaine Silverman PART II: HERITAGE IN CONTEXT 5. From Heritage to Archaeology and Back Again -- Shatha Abu Khafajah and Arwa Badren 6. Heritage and History -- Jessica Moody 7. Thinking About Others through Museums and Heritage -- Andrea Witcomb 8. Heritage and Tourism -- Duncan Light 9. Heritage and Geography -- Nuala C. Johnson PART III: HERITAGE AND CULTURAL EXPERIENCE 10. Affect, Heritage, Feeling -- David Crouch 11. Heritage and Memory -- Joy Sather-Wagstaff 12. Heritage and the Visual Arts -- Russell Staiff 13. Industrial Heritage and Tourism: A Review of the Literature -- Alfonso Vargas Sanchez 14. Curating Sound for Future Communities -- Noel Lobley 15. Heritage and Sport -- Gregory Ramshaw and Sean Gammon PART IV: CONTESTED HERITAGE AND EMERGING ISSUES 16. Heritage in Multicultural Times -- Cristobal Gnecco 17. Cultural Heritage and Armed Conflict: New Questions for an Old Relationship -- Dacia Viejo Rose and Marie Louise Stig Sorensen 18. Heritage and Globalisation -- Rodney Harrison 19. Critical Approaches to Post-Colonial (Post-Conflict) Heritage -- John Giblin PART V: HERITAGE, IDENTITY AND AFFILIATION 20. Heritage and Nationalism: An Unbreachable Couple? -- Tim Winter 21. Heritage and Participation -- Cath Neal 22. Heritage and Social Class -- Bella Dicks 23. Of Routes and Roots: Paths for Understanding Diasporic Heritage -- Ann Reed 24. Making Feminist Heritage Work: Gender and Heritage -- Anna Reading PART VI: HERITAGE AND SOCIAL PRACTICE 25. 'Thinkers and Feelers' a Psychological Perspective on Heritage and Society -- John Schofield 26. Heritage and Policy -- John Pendlebury 27. Heritage, Power and Ideology -- Katharina Schramm 28. Heritage and Economic Development -- Steve Watson and Maria del Rosario Gonzalez-Rodriguez 29. Heritage in Consumer Marketing -- Georgios C. Papageorgiou 30. Heritage and Sustainable Development: Transdisciplinary Imaginings of a Wicked Philosophy -- Robyn Bushell PART VII: CONCLUSIONS 31. Contemporary Heritage and the Future -- Cornelius Holtorf and Anders Hogberg 32. Themes, Thoughts, Reflections -- Steve Watson and Emma Waterton
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In this textbook we see heritage in action in indigenous and vernacular communities, in urban development and regeneration schemes, in expressions of community, in acts of nostalgia and memorialization and counteracts of forgetting, in museums and other spaces of representation, in tourism, in the offices of those making public policy, and in the politics of identity and claims toward cultural property. Whether renowned or local, tangible or intangible, the entire heritage enterprise, at whatever scale, is by now inextricably embedded in "value". The global context requires a sanguine approach to heritage in which the so-called critical stance is not just theorized in a rarefied sphere of scholarly lexical gymnastics, but practically engaged and seen to be doing things in the world
This book is a response to the burgeoning interest in cultural tourism and the associated need for a coherently theorized approach for understanding the practices that such an interest creates. Cultural tourism has become an important and popular aspect of contemporary tourism studies, as well as providing a rich seam of upscale product development opportunities in the industry as a whole. Much of the related literature, however, focuses upon describing and categorizing cultural tourism from a supply-side perspective. This has prompted the taxonomizing of cultural tourists on the basis of their level of involvement and interest in cultural tourism products and/or their economic worth as a sought after market segment. There have been few recent attempts at a rigorous re-theorization of the issues beyond conventional representational theories; this book aims to fill that void. This groundbreaking volume provides a theoretical and empirical account of what it means to be a cultural or heritage tourist. It achieves this by exploring the interactions of people with places, spaces, intangible heritage and ways of life, not as linear alignments but as seductive 'moments' of encounter, engagement, performance and meaning-making, which are constitutive of cultural experience in its broadest sense. The book further explores encounters in cultural tourism as events that capture and constitute important social relations involving power and authority, self-consciousness and social position, gender and space, history and the present. It also explores the consequences these insights have for our understanding of culture and heritage and its management in the context of tourist activity. In capturing the 'cultural moment', this book provides a better understanding of the motivations, on-site activities, meaning constructions and other cultural work done by both
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Accurate protein quantification is a vital prerequisite for generating meaningful predictions when using systems biology approaches, a method that is increasingly being used to unravel the complexities of subcellular interactions and as part of the drug discovery process. Quantitative proteomics, flow cytometry, and western blotting have been extensively used to define human platelet protein copy numbers, yet for mouse platelets, a model widely used for platelet research, evidence is largely limited to a single proteomic dataset in which the total amount of proteins was generally comparatively higher than those found in human platelets. ; This work was supported by the Academy of Medical Science springboard grant to A.Y.P. [SBF002\1099]. The support of the British Heart Foundation (BHF) is gratefully acknowledged by J.L.D., (PG/16/20/32074) T.S., A.P.B and A.J.U (RG/15/2/31224) to J.M.G. B.N. is supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (grant SFB/TR 240). The mouse model was generated with support from the BHF (FS/15/71/31677). E.J.H. was supported by a BHF grant (RG/13/18/30563) to S.P.W. who holds a BHF (CH0/003) supporting Y.D and N.S.P. M.S. is supported by a European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under Marie Sklodowska‐Curie grant agreement No. 766118 to S.P.W., N.S.P., A.Y.P., J.M.G., B.N., and A.G ; SI