A Contemporary Archaeology of London’s Mega Events
$80.00
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Trade Discount | 5 + | 25% |
- Description
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Description
The contemporary archaeology of urban mega-events. This book explores the traces of London’s most significant modern “mega events”: the Great Exhibition of 1851, the 1951 Festival of Britain’s South Bank Exhibition, and the 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games. Though only open for a few weeks or months, mega events permanently and disruptively reshape their host cities and societies: they demolish and rebuild whole districts, they draw in materials and participants from around the globe, and their organizers self-consciously seek to leave a “legacy” that will endure for decades or more. The book argues that these spectacles must thus be seen as long-lived and persistent, rather than simply transient or short-term phenomena. It explores the long-term history of each event through contemporary archaeology, examining the contents and building materials of the Great Exhibition’s Crystal Palace and their extraordinary afterlife at Sydenham, South London; how the Festival of Britain’s South Bank Exhibition employed displays of ancient history to construct a new postwar British identity; and how London 2012 dealt with competing visions of the past as archaeology, waste, and heritage in creating a vision of the future.
Prologue: A Research
Autobiography
I Interdisciplinary
Research: A systems Approach
1. Interdisciplinary
research
2.
Being interdisciplinary
II Doing Interdisciplinary Research
3.
How to start
4. Establishing
a research base-1: system models
5.
Establishing a research base-2: data
6. Doing
the research: different kinds of problem solving
III Tricks of the trade
7. Adding to the toolkit: explorations
8. Adding
to the toolkit-2: more on superconcepts
IV.
Managing and Organising Research
9.
Managing research, managing ourselves
10.
Organising research
Bibliography
Additional information
Dimensions | 1 × 6 × 9 in |
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