All Stories

  1. Concise Introduction to Heritage Studies
  2. Contents
  3. Copyright
  4. Critical heritage studies: key concepts and debates
  5. Critical heritage studies: origins and history
  6. Doing heritage research
  7. Heritage as a resource
  8. List of abbreviations
  9. Preface
  10. What does heritage do?
  11. What is heritage?
  12. Heritage, Reconciliation and Peacebuilding in Australia and New Zealand
  13. Heritage, the power of the past, and the politics of (mis)recognition
  14. Desafiando o Discurso Autorizado de Patrimônio *
  15. Emotional Heritage
  16. Introduction
  17. International Journal of Heritage Studies
  18. Bonding and dissonance: Rethinking the Interrelations Among Stakeholders in Heritage Tourism
  19. Critical heritage studies and the legacies of the late-twentieth century heritage canon
  20. Safeguarding Intangible Heritage
  21. It's not all about archaeology
  22. Uses of Heritage
  23. Nostalgia and heritage
  24. Nostalgia and working class memory
  25. Fostering empathy through museums
  26. The Tautology of “Intangible Values” and the Misrecognition of Intangible Cultural Heritage
  27. Explorations in Banality: Prison Tourism at the Old Melbourne Gaol
  28. affect and emotion in heritage and museum studies
  29. museum and heritage visiting
  30. Uses of Heritage
  31. Smith, Laurajane
  32. International Journal of Heritage Studies
  33. Heritage and Social Media: Understanding Heritage in a Participatory Culture Edited by ElisaGiaccardi. London: Routledge, 2012. 251 pages. Paperback: $44.95
  34. Editorial
  35. Critical Heritage Studies
  36. Discourses of heritage : implications for archaeological community practice.
  37. Gender at the Stockman's Hall of Fame, Longreach, Queensland.
  38. Heritage, Labour and the Working Classes
  39. Constrained by Commonsense: The Authorized Heritage Discourse in Contemporary Debates
  40. Conference announcement: Association of Critical Heritage Studies
  41. Labour’s heritage
  42. Look, it's stones in a field!
  43. The ‘Patrimonial Mirror’: Narcissistic Illusion or Multiple Reflections?
  44. Laurajane Smith and Emma Waterton, Heritage, Communities and Archaeology (Duckworth Debates in Archaeology, London: Duckworth, 2009, 174 pp., 4 figs., pbk, ISBN 978-0-7156-3681-7) - Jeremy A. Sabloff, Archaeology Matters: Action Archaeolog...
  45. Review of K. Yoshida & J. Mack (eds.). Preserving the Cultural Heritage of Africa: Crisis or Renaissance?
  46. Remembering and forgetting the abolition act of 1807
  47. community heritage
  48. World Heritage
  49. Editorial
  50. Intangible Heritage
  51. “Heritage protection for the 21st century”
  52. Equity and Gender in Australian Archeology: A Survey of the “Women in Archaeology” Conference, 1991
  53. Claire Smith & H. Martin Wobst (ed.). Indigenous Archaeologies: Decolonizing Theory and Practice (One World Archaeology 47). xxiv+ 408 pages, 84 illustrations, 6 tables. 2005. Abingdon & New York: Routledge; 0-415-30965-4 hardback £85.
  54. POLITICS OF ARCHAEOLOGY
  55. Heritage and the politics of recognition.
  56. Uses of Heritage
  57. critical discourse analysis and heritage studies.
  58. Yorke Rowan & Uzi Baram (ed.). Marketing heritage: archaeology and the consumption of the past. x+315 pages, 20 illustrations, tables. 2004. Walnut Creek (CA): AltaMira; 0-7591-0342-9 paperback $29.95 & £22.95; 0-7591-0341-0 hardback $75.
  59. Comment on “dwelling at the margins, action at the intersection? Feminist and indigenous archaeologies, 2005”
  60. The repatriation of human remains – problem or opportunity?
  61. The politics of cultural heritage
  62. Community-driven Research in Cultural Heritage Management: the Waanyi Women's History Project
  63. Viewing Riversleigh as a Cultural Landscape
  64. A history of Aboriginal heritage legislation in south-eastern Australia
  65. ?Doing Archaeology?: cultural heritage management and its role in identifying the link between archaeological practice and theory
  66. Cultural heritage management and feminist expression in Australian archaeology
  67. What is this thing called postprocessual archaeology ...and is it relevant for Australian archaeology?
  68. Heritage management as postprocessual archaeology?
  69. Teaching Cultural Tourism - Some Comments From The Classroom
  70. Women In Archaeology Conference: A Feminist Critique Of Archaeology
  71. Discussion