Each day the joint managers of Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park receive packages of returned rocks and sand that have been removed from the landscape by visitors as a souvenir of the place. The returned objects are sent from people all over the world as the stories of this phenomenon travel well beyond the Park boundaries. Known within the Park as the ‘sorry rocks’, these returned objects and their accompanying letters of apology reflect the different ways in which people engage with the landscape and interpret their surrounds. In this research, the sorry rocks have been used as a medium for examining the complex relationships that exist between visitors, heritage management and interpretation particularly in cross-cultural settings that reco...
What role can (or should) artworks play in non-urban landscapes, particularly those perceived as ‘wi...
This paper explores past connections of Aboriginal people within what is now known as the Wet Tropic...
AbstractThe study looked at the role of cultural interpretation in sustainable tourism development. ...
This paper explores issues relating to multiple and changing values and uses of desert landscapes in...
Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park is one of Australia's most high-profile tourist destinations. Each ye...
This paper examines how Indigenous cultures and their connections to country are presented to the pu...
This article focuses on management in the culture of a unique community, that is, the indigenous peo...
Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park in Australia's Northern Territory continues to be a contested site, a...
Heritage sites are regularly understood to be one of the social spaces within which people construct...
Humanity has had a long relationship with rocks including collecting them. This article argues that ...
Management of the Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park in Australia - a contribution to the research of Ab...
This paper focuses on Australian Indigenous rock art tourism, a field that has received limited rese...
Uluru is an Australian ‘icon’, an impressively huge red boulder located centrally in the arid contin...
International audienceContemporary narratives and interpretations surrounding rock art production in...
Contemporary narratives and interpretations surrounding rock art production in present-day settings ...
What role can (or should) artworks play in non-urban landscapes, particularly those perceived as ‘wi...
This paper explores past connections of Aboriginal people within what is now known as the Wet Tropic...
AbstractThe study looked at the role of cultural interpretation in sustainable tourism development. ...
This paper explores issues relating to multiple and changing values and uses of desert landscapes in...
Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park is one of Australia's most high-profile tourist destinations. Each ye...
This paper examines how Indigenous cultures and their connections to country are presented to the pu...
This article focuses on management in the culture of a unique community, that is, the indigenous peo...
Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park in Australia's Northern Territory continues to be a contested site, a...
Heritage sites are regularly understood to be one of the social spaces within which people construct...
Humanity has had a long relationship with rocks including collecting them. This article argues that ...
Management of the Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park in Australia - a contribution to the research of Ab...
This paper focuses on Australian Indigenous rock art tourism, a field that has received limited rese...
Uluru is an Australian ‘icon’, an impressively huge red boulder located centrally in the arid contin...
International audienceContemporary narratives and interpretations surrounding rock art production in...
Contemporary narratives and interpretations surrounding rock art production in present-day settings ...
What role can (or should) artworks play in non-urban landscapes, particularly those perceived as ‘wi...
This paper explores past connections of Aboriginal people within what is now known as the Wet Tropic...
AbstractThe study looked at the role of cultural interpretation in sustainable tourism development. ...