This article summarizes the results from recent research focusing on the experience and negotiation of authenticity in relation to the historic environment. I argue that approaches to authenticity are still hampered by a prevailing dichotomy between materialist approaches (which see authenticity as inherent in the object) and constructivist approaches (which see it as a cultural construct). This dichotomy means that we have a relatively poor understanding of how people experience authenticity in practice at heritage sites and why they find the issue of authenticity so compelling. Drawing on ethnographic research in Scotland and Nova Scotia, I show that the experience of authenticity is bound up with the network of tangible and intangible re...
This chapter explores the utility of an existentialist understanding of authenticity for the histori...
Our understanding of authenticity in the material world is characterized by a problematic dichotomy ...
Restoration is often problematised within built heritage practice as an inauthentic activity of imit...
This article summarizes the results from recent research focusing on the experience and negotiation ...
Our understanding of authenticity in the material world is characterized by a problematic dichotomy ...
Our understanding of authenticity in the material world is characterized by a problematic dichotomy ...
This article challenges the claimed gulf between ‘Eastern’ and ‘Western’ concepts and approaches to ...
This article challenges the claimed gulf between 'Eastern' and 'Western' concepts and approaches to ...
This article challenges the claimed gulf between 'Eastern' and 'Western' concepts and approaches to ...
There is a lively ongoing debate on Critical Heritage Studies and the Authorised Heritage Discourse,...
This article examines the question of authenticity in relation to 3D visualisation of historic objec...
This article examines the question of authenticity in relation to 3D visualisation of historic objec...
This chapter explores the utility of an existentialist understanding of authenticity for the histori...
This chapter explores the utility of an existentialist understanding of authenticity for the histori...
This chapter explores the utility of an existentialist understanding of authenticity for the histori...
This chapter explores the utility of an existentialist understanding of authenticity for the histori...
Our understanding of authenticity in the material world is characterized by a problematic dichotomy ...
Restoration is often problematised within built heritage practice as an inauthentic activity of imit...
This article summarizes the results from recent research focusing on the experience and negotiation ...
Our understanding of authenticity in the material world is characterized by a problematic dichotomy ...
Our understanding of authenticity in the material world is characterized by a problematic dichotomy ...
This article challenges the claimed gulf between ‘Eastern’ and ‘Western’ concepts and approaches to ...
This article challenges the claimed gulf between 'Eastern' and 'Western' concepts and approaches to ...
This article challenges the claimed gulf between 'Eastern' and 'Western' concepts and approaches to ...
There is a lively ongoing debate on Critical Heritage Studies and the Authorised Heritage Discourse,...
This article examines the question of authenticity in relation to 3D visualisation of historic objec...
This article examines the question of authenticity in relation to 3D visualisation of historic objec...
This chapter explores the utility of an existentialist understanding of authenticity for the histori...
This chapter explores the utility of an existentialist understanding of authenticity for the histori...
This chapter explores the utility of an existentialist understanding of authenticity for the histori...
This chapter explores the utility of an existentialist understanding of authenticity for the histori...
Our understanding of authenticity in the material world is characterized by a problematic dichotomy ...
Restoration is often problematised within built heritage practice as an inauthentic activity of imit...