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The Stone Age is now beginning to be recognised as vital in
establishing who we are and where we have come from. This period
has long been neglected.
Managing Heritage in Africa provides a wide-ranging, up-to-date
synthesis of heritage management practice in Africa, covering a
broad spectrum of heritage issues such as archaeology, living
traditions, sacred sites, heritage of pain (slavery), international
conventions cultural landscapes, heritage in conflict areas and
heritage versus development. Dealing with both intangible and
tangible heritage, Managing Heritage in Africa gives an informative
insight into some of the major issues and approaches to
contemporary heritage management in Africa and situates the
challenges facing heritage practitioners.
This volume contains contributions that consider new approaches to
three areas: the documentation of rock art; its interpretation
using indigenous knowledge; and the presentation of rock art.
Working with Rock Art is the first edited volume to consider each
of these areas in a theoretical rather than a technical fashion,
and it therefore makes a significant contribution to the
discipline. The volume aims to promote the sharing of new
experiences between leading researchers in the field. While the
geographic focus is truly global, there is a dominant north-south
axis with strong representation from researchers in southern Africa
and northern Europe, two leading centres for new approaches in rock
art research. Working with Rock Art opens up a long overdue
dialogue about shared experiences between these two centres, and a
number of the chapters are the first published results of new
collaborative research. Since this volume covers the recording,
interpretation and presentation of rock art, it will attract a wide
audience of researchers, heritage managers and students, as well as
anyone interested in the field of rock art studies.
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