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E-grāmata: Changing Perceptions of Nature

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  • Formāts: 356 pages
  • Sērija : Heritage Matters
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Jun-2016
  • Izdevniecība: The Boydell Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781782046738
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  • Formāts: 356 pages
  • Sērija : Heritage Matters
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Jun-2016
  • Izdevniecība: The Boydell Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781782046738

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The concepts of nature, culture and heritage are deeply entwined; their threads run together in some of our finest museums, in accounts of exploration and discovery, in the work of artists, poets and writers, and in areas that are cherished and protected because of their landscapes and wildlife. The conservation ethic - placing a value on the natural environment - lies at the heart of the notion of "natural heritage", but we need to question how those values originated, were consolidated and ultimately moulded and changed over time. In a contemporary context the connections between nature and culture have sometimes become lost, fragmented, dislocated or misunderstood; where did "natural heritage" begin and how do we engage with the idea of "nature" today? The essays collected here re-evaluate the role of culture in developing the concept of natural heritage, reflecting on the shifts in its interpretation over the last 300 years. Contributors include: Martin Holdgate, Marie Addyman, E Charles Nelson, Darrell Smith, Andrew Ramsey, Viktor Kouloumpis, Richard Milner, Gina Douglas, Penny Bradshaw, Arthur MacGregor, Chiara Nepi, Hannah Paddon, Stephen Hewitt, Gordon McGregor Reid, Ghillean T Prance, Christopher Donaldson, Lucy McRobert, Sophie Darlington, Keith Scholey, Paul A Roncken, Angus Lunn, Juliet Clutton-Brock, Tim Sands, Robert A Lambert, James Champion, Erwin van Maanen, Heather Prince, Chris Loynes, Julie Taylor, Sarah Elmeligi, Samantha Finn, Owen Nevin, Jared Bowers, Kate Hennessy, Natasha Lyons, Mike Jeffries.

Essays investigating the idea of natural heritage and the ways in which it has changed over time.

Recenzijas

An extremely rich source of viewpoints and explorations of what nature means. * ARCHIVES OF NATURAL HISTORY * Many chapters provide only an introduction and/or a tantalizing taste of the subject, but all have extensive bibliographies. Topics range from the perceptions of explorers and naturalists, the development of scientific collections and taxidermy, individual areas and locations, and nature in art and film to nature deficit disorder, social media, ecotourism, citizen science, and teddy bears. [ ...] This work is mainly recommended for collections with a focus on the history and/or philosophy of science, nature, or environmentalism. * CHOICE *

List of Illustrations
viii
Acknowledgments xiv
List of Abbreviations
xv
Foreword xvii
Martin Holdgate
Introduction 1(6)
Ian Convery
Peter Davis
Historical Perspectives on Nature
1 `The Nomination of the Visible': William Turner's Practice of Natural History
7(10)
Marie Addyman
2 Early European Perceptions of the Nature of Australia
17(10)
E Charles Nelson
3 Conserving Natural Heritage: Shifting Positions of Culture and Nature
27(10)
Darrell Smith
Ian Convery
Andrew Ramsey
Viktor Kuuloumpis
4 Three Birds of a Feather - Darwin, Wallace and Attenborough: An Unbroken Tradition of Finding Where the Wild Things Are
37(12)
Richard Milner
5 Organising, Naming and Ordering Nature
49(14)
Gina Douglas
6 Our `Great Entail': Constructing the Cultural Value of the Lake District
63(12)
Penny Bradshaw
Collecting Nature
7 Renaissance Collecting and Understanding of the Natural World
75(14)
Arthur MacGregor
8 Botanical Collecting, Herbaria and the Understanding of Nature
89(10)
Chiara Nepi
9 Taxidermy and the Representation of Nature
99(8)
Hannah Paddon
10 The Significance of Natural History Collections in the Twenty-first Century
107(12)
Stephen Hewitt
Interpreting Nature and Landscapes
11 Changed Attitudes to Nature Reflected in the Transformation of Menageries to Zoos
119(10)
Gordon McGregor Reid
12 Botanic Gardens: Changing Perceptions of Plants
129(12)
Ghillean T Prance
Peter Davis
13 Shifting Interpretations of the English Lake District
141(8)
Christopher Donaldson
14 Facebook Nature: My Generation and Other Animals
149(8)
Lucy McRobert
15 Visual Narratives in Wildlife Film-making
157(8)
Sophie Darlington
16 A History of Half a Century of Wildlife Television and its Impact on Audiences
165(6)
Keith Scholey
17 Landscape, Nature and the Contemporary Sublime in Illustrated Children's Literature
171(14)
Paul A Roncken
Ian Convery
Conserving Nature
18 The Public Perception of Protected Areas in the UK
185(10)
Angus Lunn
19 Conservation of Rare Species and Natural Heritage: the Wild and the Tame
195(8)
Juliet Clutton-Brock
20 Our Vanishing Natural Heritage and The Wildlife Trusts: a Century of Influence and Local Action for Nature and People
203(10)
Tim Sands
Robert A Lambert
21 A Champion of the Tiger's Cause
213(14)
James Champion
People---Nature Interactions
22 Adventure, Nature and Commodification
227(8)
Heather Prince
Chris Loynes
23 Destination Nature: Wildlife and the Rise of Domestic Ecotourism in Britain, 1880-2015
235(10)
Robert A Lambert
24 Wild Places as Therapeutic Environments
245(8)
Julie Taylor
25 Citizen Science and the Perception of Nature
253(12)
Sarah Elmeligi
Samantha Finn
Owen Nevin
Ian Convoy
26 Using Community-based Cultural Tourism to Enhance Nature Conservation in the Rupununi, Guyana
265(10)
Jared Bowers
27 Representing Natural Heritage in Digital Space: from the National Museum of Natural History to Inuvialuit Living History
275(14)
Kate Hennessy
Natasha Lyons
28 Our of the Wild Wood and into our Beds: the Evolutionary History of Teddy Bears and the Natural Selection of Deadly Cuteness
289(10)
Mike Jeffries
29 Rewilding: the Realisation and Reality of a New Challenge for Nature in the Twenty-first Century
299(18)
Erwin van Maanen
Jan Convoy
List of Contributors 317(8)
Index 325
IAN CONVERY is Professor of Environment & Society at the University of Cumbria. He is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and is a director of the Lifescapes Project conservation charity. PETER DAVIS is Emeritus Professor of Museology in the School of Arts and Cultures at Newcastle University, UK. His research interests relate to the connections between place, nature, heritage, communities and sustainability. DR ARTHUR MACGREGOR, LVO is an Andrew W. Mellon Visiting Professor at the Victoria and Albert Museum Research Institute, UK. Dr Christopher Donaldson is a Senior Lecturer in Cultural History and became Director of VCH Cumbria in 2024. Erwin van Maanen of EcoNatura is a (conservation) biologist, with a specific interest in mammalian carnivore ecology. IAN CONVERY is Professor of Environment & Society at the University of Cumbria. He is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and is a director of the Lifescapes Project conservation charity. MARIE ADDYMAN is an independent scholar whose writing and teaching reflects the interdisciplinary approach which is fundamental to her practice. While guest-lecturing on English literature and women's studies at various English universities, she has taught literature, history, and history of medicine for the Open University. OWEN T. NEVIN is Chief Executive Officer of the Western Australian Biodiversity Science Institute (WABSI), Adjunct Professor of Conservation Biology at CQUniversity Australia and Anniversary Visiting Professor of Conservation Biology at the University of Cumbria PETER DAVIS is Emeritus Professor of Museology in the School of Arts and Cultures at Newcastle University, UK. His research interests relate to the connections between place, nature, heritage, communities and sustainability.