The monumental challenge of preservation : the past in a volatile world / Michèle Valerie Cloonan.
2018
N8850
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Online Access through The MIT Press Direct
Details
Title
The monumental challenge of preservation : the past in a volatile world / Michèle Valerie Cloonan.
ISBN
9780262345798 (electronic bk.)
026234579X (electronic bk.)
9780262037730
0262037734
026234579X (electronic bk.)
9780262037730
0262037734
Published
Cambridge, Massachusetts : The MIT Press, [2018]
Copyright
©2018
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (xxiii, 280 pages) : illustrations
Call Number
N8850
Dewey Decimal Classification
363.69
Summary
The enormous task of preserving the world's heritage in the face of war, natural disaster, vandalism, neglect, and technical obsolescence. The monuments--movable, immovable, tangible, and intangible--of the world's shared cultural heritage are at risk. War, terrorism, natural disaster, vandalism, and neglect make the work of preservation a greater challenge than it has been since World War II. In The Monumental Challenge of Preservation Michele Cloonan makes the case that, at this critical juncture, we must consider preservation in the broadest possible contexts. Preservation requires the efforts of an increasing number of stakeholders. In order to explore the cultural, political, technological, economic, and ethical dimensions of preservation, Cloonan examines particular monuments and their preservation dilemmas. The massive Bamiyan Buddhas, blown up by the Taliban in 2001, are still the subject of debates over how, or whether, to preserve what remains, and the U.S. National Park Service has undertaken the complex task of preserving the symbolic and often ephemeral objects that visitors leave at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial--to take just two of the many examples described in the book. Cloonan also considers the ongoing genocide and cultural genocide in Syria; the challenges of preserving our digital heritage; the dynamic between original and copy; efforts to preserve the papers and architectural fragments of the architect Louis Sullivan; and the possibility of sustainable preservation. In the end, Cloonan suggests, we are what we preserve--and don't preserve. Every day we make preservation decisions, individually and collectively, that have longer-term ramifications than we might expect.
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