Journal: Veröffentlichungen des Arbeitskreises Theorie und Lehre der Denkmalpflege
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Verlag Jörg Mitzkat
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Publications 1 - 3 of 3
- Zur Erhaltung des nicht HaltbarenItem type: Conference Paper
Veröffentlichungen des Arbeitskreises Theorie und Lehre der Denkmalpflege ~ Das Digitale und die Denkmalpflege: Bestandserfassung-Denkmalvermittlung-Datenarchivierung-Rekonstruktion verlorener Objekte: Chancen und Grenzen im Einsatz digitaler Technologien: Veränderungen in der Praxis von Denkmalpflege und KulturgutsicherungLangenberg, Silke (2017) - In jeder Stadt (k)ein WarenhausItem type: Conference Paper
Veröffentlichungen des Arbeitskreises Theorie und Lehre der Denkmalpflege ~ Strukturwandel - Denkmalwandel. Umbau - Umnutzung - UmdeutungLangenberg, Silke; Ilmberger, Katharina (2016) - Dissonant Heritage of Care: Children’s Towns in Postwar GreeceItem type: Book Chapter
Veröffentlichungen des Arbeitskreises Theorie und Lehre der Denkmalpflege ~ Erschütterung. Erde und Erbe in der Krise / Tremor. Earth and Heritage in CrisisLangenberg, Silke; Kouvari, Maria (2024)How heritage is identified as such and selected as worthy of preservation is, beyond material aspects, largely determined by the narratives of history and memory. This paper discusses the built legacy of postwar children’s institutions in Greece and its marginalization within formal heritage processes. Children’s towns paidopoleis in Greece, the first of which emerged at the outset of the Greek Civil War (1944–49) following WWII, were a project undertaken by queen Frederica to help war-affected children. The queen’s campaign not only was humanitarian but also served an agenda of anticommunist Greek nationalism in favor of the Greek government and the palace. The towns are therefore also a battleground of conflicting viewpoints which is reflected in the evaluation and designation as heritage. Taking as an entry point the children’s towns in Dovra and in Ziros in Northern Greece, whose legacy has been colored by the trauma of the Greek Civil War, built environments of children’s institutions are discussed in terms of entanglements, competing voices, and their current state. This discussion shows how long-lasting war trauma contributed to the obscureness of the built artifacts of the children’s towns, which are nearly absent from heritage inventories, offering a critical window into the challenges that sociopolitical debates pose in the theory and practice of historic preservation.
Publications 1 - 3 of 3