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In a sweeping survey of archaeological sites spanning thousands of
years, Heritage and the Existential Need for History asks
fundamental questions about the place of cultural heritage in
Western society. What is history? Why do we write about the events
of yesterday and set up memorials for them? Why do we visit places
where momentous things have happened?Maud Webster takes readers on
a journey from Bronze Age Mycenae through the Greek Dark Ages, from
Medieval Rome through the Italian Renaissance, and from Viking
Sweden to Restoration-period England and Civil War America.
Combining archaeology, history, and psychology, Webster explores
themes including literacy and text, monumentality and spoliation,
and death and identity. She traces the human need for history at
two levels-the collective, here shown through archaeological
evidence, and the individual, shown through written records and the
behavior they document. Webster's robust cross-examination of
artifacts and texts, and the illustrations drawn from this
methodology, attest that locating our history helps us anchor
ourselves, for multiple purposes and from varying perspectives, and
that the drive to write and build histories is an enduring part of
the human experience.
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Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
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