2005 US/ICOMOS Annual Scientific Journal


US/ICOMOS
HOME
"HERITAGE INTERPRETATION"
includes the proceedings of the 8th US/ICOMOS International Symposium, which was held May 5-8, 2005 in Charleston, South Carolina.  The 2005 Annual Scientific Journal was distributed in electronic format (on CD-ROM) to all 2005 International and National Affiliate members.
The 2005 Annual Scientific Journal is now available to the public on CD-ROM for US $50.
- ORDER FORM for the US/ICOMOS Annual Scientific Journal -
CONTENTS
Session 1 - Philosophy and Policy
  •  Digesting the Past: Interpretation and the European Heritage Industry
    (by Neil Silberman, Belgium)
  •  Interpretation as a Factor Altering Conservation Doctrine: The Case for Reconstruction and Rebuilding
    (by Boguslaw Szmygin, Poland)
  •  From Nationalism to National Identity: The Anglo – Boer South African War – Reinterpreting Old Heritage for the New South Africa
    (by Andrew Hall, South Africa)
  •  Ownership Conflicts and Heritage Interpretation in Uganda and Tanzania
    (by Karen Moon, Tanzania)


 

Session 2 - Technologies & Techniques of Presentation and Interpretation
  •  Introduction to Session 2 - The Art of Place Making
    (by Ron Fleming, USA)
  •  The Virtual Indian Ocean: Expressing the Significance of Tarim, Yemen, through New Media (by James Conlon, USA)
  •  Expressing Them as It Should Be: Welcome Them Aboard
    (by Dawson Munjeri, Zimbabwe)
  •  Archaeology and Heritage Interpretation in Charleston, South Carolina
    (by Martha Zierden, USA)
  •  Ruins of Piranesi - Ruins Over Time: The Presentation and Interpretation of Ruined Monuments (by Randolph Langenbach, USA)

Session 3 - Case Studies
  •  Towards a Regime for the Sustainable, Ethically, Regionally Maintainable Conservation of Large Archaeological Sites on the Silk Road
    (by John Hurd, United Kingdom)
  •  Experiences of the World Monuments Fund in Balancing Interpretation with Preservation (by Norma Barbacci and Mark Webster, USA - World Monuments Fund)
  •  Heritage Interpretation in Projects Financed by the World Bank: Challenges and Complexities (by Arlene Fleming, World Bank)
  •  Interpreting the Cultural Palimpsest at Port Arthur, Tasmania
    (by Peter Romey, Australia)
  •  The Tower of London and the Creation of a Victorian Myth
    (by Geoffrey Parnell, United Kingdom)
  •  Commemorating the Uncomfortable: the Insecure Future of the Relics, Remnants and Traces of the Historical Landscape Formerly Known as the Berlin Wall (by Axel Klausmeier, Germany)
  •  Angel Island Immigration Station: International Place of Memory
    (by Steve Farneth and David Quan, USA)
  •  Understanding and Interpreting the Past of an Urban Commercial District: Examining the Recent Experience of Old Montreal
    (by Joanne Burgess, Canada)

Session 4 - Targeting and Widening Audiences through Interpretation
  •  Parque del Este , Caracas, Venezuela
    (by Diana Henriquez de Fernandez and Maria Eugenia Bacci
  •  The Memorial of Moses at Mount Nebo, Jordan: Facing a Difficult Future (by W. Brown Morton III, USA)
  • A Training & Education Centre for Improving the Preservation and Better Interpretation of Banska Stiavnika, a World Heritage Town
    (by Katarina Voskova, Slovakia)
  •  Interpretation of the Route 66 Cultural Corridor
    (by Kaissa Barthulli, USA)
  •  Interpreting Native American Ruins in the Southwestern United States: Perceptions of Significance and Value in a Post-Romantic Age
    (by Mary Slater, USA)
  •  Dakota Stories and Places: Collaborations with and New Interpretations of a Neglected Community (by Anne Ketz, USA)
  •  Using Historic Sites to Interpret Racially Diverse Experience: Proposals Drawn from a National Study (by Ned Kaufman, USA)
  •  Low Country Gullah Special Study
    (by Cynthia Porcher, USA)

 

-ORDER FORM for 2005 US/ICOMOS Annual Scientific Journal-