Abstract Neo-relics, constructions borrowing their looks from ancient structures or sites ranging from the mighty Stonehenge to a humble Troy town, have recently been erected in different parts of Finland. In authorized heritage discourse, they are often seen as a potential threat. However, we demonstrate here, with a variety of examples from various social contexts, how ordinary people assign meanings and functions to archaeological heritage through them. We also approach the question of their authenticity by applying Cornelius Holtorf’s materialistically infused constructivist definition of pastness — a property related to an object’s age-value rather than its actual age — to find out why personal involvement, localness and stories are i...
This chapter considers the heritage of the recent and contemporary past, both as a specific time per...
In this chapter I will discuss how the shift from analogue representations of the past, be they of r...
One of the most important materials available to us for building the future is the past. The future ...
How did past communities view, understand and communicate their pasts? And how can we, as archaeolog...
How did past communities view, understand and communicate their pasts? And how can we, as archaeolog...
Heritage is often seen as a symptom of a temporally disjointed and all-pervasive present which shape...
This paper analyses the so-called biography of a thing as a way of thinking about the value and mean...
This research study is inspired by a great fascination with built heritage, for its tangible beauty,...
My goal in this paper is to investigate the values that underlie different choices regarding the rec...
With his expression ceci tuera cela, Hugo established almost two centuries ago a strong link between...
International audienceThis paper uses Classical antiquity as an example to examine how archaeologica...
An Archaeological Approach to History’s Ownership: Since we were young, our teachers, parents and tu...
This chapter explores the ways in which that which is labelled ‘heritage’ is created and what this c...
This chapter will examine the historical roots of heritage interpretation from antiquity to its clas...
Due to a raise of network-based society and interaction based decision making processes in contempor...
This chapter considers the heritage of the recent and contemporary past, both as a specific time per...
In this chapter I will discuss how the shift from analogue representations of the past, be they of r...
One of the most important materials available to us for building the future is the past. The future ...
How did past communities view, understand and communicate their pasts? And how can we, as archaeolog...
How did past communities view, understand and communicate their pasts? And how can we, as archaeolog...
Heritage is often seen as a symptom of a temporally disjointed and all-pervasive present which shape...
This paper analyses the so-called biography of a thing as a way of thinking about the value and mean...
This research study is inspired by a great fascination with built heritage, for its tangible beauty,...
My goal in this paper is to investigate the values that underlie different choices regarding the rec...
With his expression ceci tuera cela, Hugo established almost two centuries ago a strong link between...
International audienceThis paper uses Classical antiquity as an example to examine how archaeologica...
An Archaeological Approach to History’s Ownership: Since we were young, our teachers, parents and tu...
This chapter explores the ways in which that which is labelled ‘heritage’ is created and what this c...
This chapter will examine the historical roots of heritage interpretation from antiquity to its clas...
Due to a raise of network-based society and interaction based decision making processes in contempor...
This chapter considers the heritage of the recent and contemporary past, both as a specific time per...
In this chapter I will discuss how the shift from analogue representations of the past, be they of r...
One of the most important materials available to us for building the future is the past. The future ...