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The 5th Heritage Forum of Central Europe, organised in September 2019, was dedicated to the links between cultural heritage and environment, as well as their mutual engagement. In recent years, and especially very recently, we have become increasingly aware that the environmental context is of paramount importance to the complete understanding of values and the very meaning of cultural heritage, which remains one of the central elements of everyone’s identity. The pandemic of the 2020–2021, with its vastly negative impact on the cultural heritage sector, will undoubtedly stimulate many cultural heritage institutions to tackle topics related to the so‑called “green revolution.” We strongly believe that individuals and institutions working in the field of cultural heritage will have to assume responsibility for education and raising social awareness with regard to environmental concerns.
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Preface
Part 1: Environmental History and Protection
Lieux de Memoire: Genealogy, Memory, and Environment
Water Histories and Heritage: Spaces, Institutions, and Cultures
Common-sense Discourses of Nature: A Gramscian Analysis of Conservation Designations in the Scottish Highlands
The Augustów Canal: The Creation of Man and Nature
Historical Residences and Modern Challenges: Moving Towards Sustainability
Superseded Reality: The Reconstruction of Manor Parks in Soviet Lithuania
Towards Eco-heritage: Shaping the Relations between Nature and Cultural Heritage in Contemporary Kraków
From Environmentalised Heritage to Heritagised Environment: The Case of the Reedland at Fertő/Neusiedlersee
Part 2: Landscape
Transformations of the Moravian Vineyard Landscape as a Political Consequence
Museographical Perspectives on Modern Fortified Landscapes: World War I Defensive Lines in Italy
Notes on the Reflexion of an Industrially Exploited Landscape in the North: Bohemia in the 20th Century Visual Arts – the Power of Image
Conservation Issues of Two Fortified Historic Towns and World Heritage Sites: Rhodes and Valletta
Towards an Aesthetics of Interface: A Preliminary Study
The Touristification of Italian Historic City Centres: The Lesson for Central Europe about the Airbnb Eruption
Part 3: Heritage and Political Environment
Protection of Culture in Conflict: Heritage in a Militarised Environment
New Architecture and Heritage: Estonian State Architecture Policy in the European Context
Cultural Nationalisms and Heritage Discourses in a Contested Borderland: The Case of the Upper Silesian Wooden Church
Synagogues in Post-Soviet Belarus and the Region: Overcoming Abandonment through Appropriation
Issues of Aesthetics in the New Architecture of UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Lithuania
Multi-layered Significance of Heritage: Mapping Castles, Their Functions, and Environment in Post-World War II Slovenia
Part 4: Education
Landscape and Freeman Tilden’s Philosophy of Heritage Interpretation
Inventory of Intangible Cultural Heritage: the Example of Estonia
The Living River: A Practical Interpretation of Heritage Trends
Transboundary European World Heritage: The Chance and Challenge of Building a European Identity through Education
Two Roads – One Mission: Cultural and Natural Heritage and Education of Children
Heritage and the Environment from the Anthropological Perspective of Cultural Ecology
About the Authors
Footnotes
© Copyright by the International Cultural Centre, 2021
REVIEWDr Tamás Fejérdy, Dr Rafał Szmytka
MANAGING EDITORMarzena Daszewska
TECHNICAL AND COPY-EDITORINGAleksandra Kamińska
PROOFREADINGAleksandra Kamińska
COVER DESIGNKrzysztof Radoszek (Radoszek Arts)
LAYOUT DESIGNWojtek Kwiecień-Janikowski
TYPESETTINGWojciech Kubiena (Biuro Szeryfy)
ISBN 978‑83‑66419-29-2
International Cultural CentreRynek Główny 25, 31-008 Kraków, Polandtel.: +48 12 42 42 811, fax: +48 12 42 17 844e-mail: sekre[email protected]
The ICC publications are available at the bookshop located in the ICC Gallery or can be ordered online: www.mck.krakow.pl
With the financial support of
Preface
Jacek Purchla, Agata Wąsowska-Pawlik
Heritage Forum of Central Europe is a platform of international dialogue on philosophy, management, protection, economics, politics, and social issues of cultural heritage.
Organised since 2011 by the International Cultural Centre, it has already become an important meeting ground for the researchers and experts from Central Europe and all over the world. Every two years in the Main Square of medieval Kraków we discuss the complex issues of cultural heritage.
The 5th Heritage Forum of Central Europe, organised in September 2019, was dedicated to the links between cultural heritage and environment, as well as their mutual engagement. In recent years, and especially very recently, we have become increasingly aware that the environmental context is of paramount importance to the complete understanding of values and the very meaning of cultural heritage, which remains one of the central elements of everyone’s identity. The pandemic of the 2020–2021, with its vastly negative impact on the cultural heritage sector, will undoubtedly stimulate many cultural heritage institutions to tackle topics related to the so-called “green revolution.” We strongly believe that individuals and institutions working in the field of cultural heritage will have to assume responsibility for education and raising social awareness with regard to environmental concerns.
One should certainly keep in mind that the UNESCO World Heritage List features 1,121 properties, including 869 cultural sites, 213 natural sites, and 39 mixed sites. This imbalance is very symptomatic, as our identity depends on both cultural and natural heritage. Our surroundings and our cultural landscape (whose major component is, as a matter of fact, nature) have become the legitimate subject of scholarly investigation in the field of the humanities and social sciences. Simultaneously, recent climate changes and a growing awareness of individual responsibility for the future of our planet have made us quite conscious of the fact that both environmental and cultural resources are non-renewable. What is more, research carried out within the framework of environmental history has helped us better understand the processes of urban development as well as changes in cultural landscape.
On the part of the heritage sector the first steps have already been taken. Climate Heritage Network (CHN) was launched in 2019, providing a voluntary, mutual support network of governmental arts, culture, and heritage agencies at local, regional, and national levels; site management authorities; NGOs; universities; businesses; and other organisations committed to tackling climate change.
In March 2021 Europa Nostra, together with ICOMOS and CHN, with the support of the European Investment Bank Institute, have prepared and presented European Cultural Heritage Green Paper. In the foreword Herman Parzinger writes that “responding effectively to climate change is the defining task of our time.” The document challenges the policymakers and cultural heritage operators to treat cultural heritage as an important tool and at the same time field where the goals of the European Green Deal can meet and create synergies.
In Poland a group “Muzea dla klimatu” [Museums for the climate] actively uses social media to share information, experience, and expertise concerning possible changes and directions for the development of cultural heritage institutions in response to the challenges linked with climate crisis.
It is our pleasure to present this volume, which is the outcome of the 5th Heritage Forum of Central Europe. While planning this conference three years ago, little did we know how urgent this issue was about to become. We sincerely hope that this volume may contribute to accelerating research into the links between cultural heritage and the environment.
Heritage Forum of Central Europe is the result of over fourteen years of Visegrad cooperation in the field of cultural heritage, moderated by the International Cultural Centre. This cooperation has resulted in, among others, annual international training programmes dedicated to the management of UNESCO World Heritage sites, as well as biennial Heritage Forum of Central Europe.
We would like to use this opportunity to express gratitude to our Visegrad partners for such a long-standing cooperation, which, we hope, has contributed to building and maintaining friendly regional relations between our respective countries. Our partners are: the Ministry of Culture of the Czech Republic, World Heritage Affairs Unit at the Prime Minister’s Office, Hungary, the Monuments Board of the Slovak Republic, and the Ministry of Culture of Slovakia.
Finally, our very special appreciation should be extended to the Municipality of Kraków for their generous support of the conference and the book itself.
Part 1
Environmental History and Protection
Lieux de Memoire: Genealogy, Memory, and Environment
Adrienne Wallman
University of Lancaster (The United Kingdom)
In the introduction to his seminal work Realms of Memory Pierre Nora claims:
The atomization of memory (as collective memory is transformed into private memory) imposes a duty to remember on each individual. […] For the individual, the discovery of roots, of “belonging” to some group, becomes the source of identity […]. When memory ceases to be omnipresent, it ceases to be present at all unless some isolated individual decides to assume responsibility for it.1
According to Nora, “lieux de mémoire [sites of memory] exist because there are no longer any milieux de mémoire, settings in which memory is a real part of everyday experience,”2 also translated as “real environments of memory.”3 Nora attributes this absence to a number of factors, including the disappearance of peasant culture, increased globalisation, and the recent changes in societies which have brought to an end the oral transmission of memories through, for example, churches and families. Thus “real memory” is separate from “history.” In the case of fractured Jewish memory, I would argue it is possible to add as a reason the destruction of whole communities in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, accompanied by flight from persecution by Jews trying to re-establish lives in new environments and new countries. In this article I use extracts from my interviews with people researching Jewish genealogy to show how the practice of genealogy can act as a form of search for those lost milieux de mémoire. I interpret “sites of memory” as both physical and emotional spaces, and cultural practices as well as physical places. I will show how genealogists employ both remembered and learnt cultural practices to enable them to link to the lost environments of their ancestors, as well as creating their own memorials. Here, Hilary explains how her grandmother’s family recreated their lost community of Plungé in Lithuania, in the East End of London:
I don’t think just kind of physical place really gives you connection. Whatever community my grandmother and family lived in in Plungé, the community is not there. […] I mean it was depleted round the time they left and obliterated in the Holocaust. So the people and the community are not there. Um, I think the community they kind of took with them in a way, to east London actually.4
In 1902 the Jewish population of London was about 150,000, of whom at least 100,000 lived in the East End.5 They had fled their homelands in Russia and Eastern Europe, following pogroms and economic hardship, and settled in an area which already had an established Jewish community and cheap lodgings. The traditional food from their countries of origin and the common Yiddish language were the cultural signifiers that were important to this community, as indicated by these quotations from residents of the Charlotte de Rothschild Buildings in Spitalfields in East London, interviewed by Jerry White in the early 1970s. The first quotation is from a Lithuanian immigrant speaking about being invited to a meal with a family from Poland:
We used a great deal of pepper and seasoning. The Polish used sugar. The essential test was when you had boiled fish. Ours was peppery and theirs was sweet.6
Yiddish was spoken throughout the community “in shops, at work, at union meetings, among neighbours and friends and in families,”7 as another of White’s interviewees testified:
My mother used Yiddish all the time. She could [italics in original] speak English but she didn’t want to.8
While these communities did become more Anglicised and acculturated during the first half of the 20th century, in the 1950s and 1960s when Hilary was growing up and as I myself experienced when growing up during the same period in a similar community in north Manchester, traditional East European food would still have been eaten and Yiddish words would still have been used. For Hilary it was this community that she knew as a child in the 1950s which became a lieu de mémoire:
I think probably where they ended up living, in the east end of London, […] I think that was the community that I did have some affinity with, and I identify with. You know the sort of east European immigrant community of my childhood, um, which was probably quite like the place they left – but they brought the place with them so it’s not the kind of the land or the territory or the geography I think that’s important but whatever it was that was important to them I think they pretty much upped sticks with it and imported it.9
Places have important mnemonic and ethno-cultural functions, as David Cesarani noted when he interviewed three Jewish writers who had grown up in the East End of London:
Place was constituted sensually and reconstituted from memory in the language of the senses. A “sense of place” was literally assembled out of sights, sounds, smells, and feel. The adult self recovers the childhood self as a receptor of inputs that are embodied and carried through life.10
However, might these memories not also become idealised over the years? Saul Issroff grew up in South Africa but, like Hilary, he now lives in London and his ancestors also came from Lithuania. He had grown up listening to his paternal grandmother talking about her life there, but acknowledges these were probably idealised images and wistfully, with a long pause and a sigh, he contemplates how people’s perception of a place may become more rose-tinted as the years pass:
[…] she used to tell me stories in her broken English with a bit of Yiddish thrown in and whatever other language came to mind, about what it was like living back in Lithuania […] I had the sort of idealised image […] wonderful forests, rivers and a really lovely life. On the other hand [laughs] when you look at the wooden houses and how they lived at that point in time, and particularly in some of the more remote areas, um, she gave a very idealised image. It was 40, 50 years since she’d left Lithuania and [pause and sigh] I wonder what memory does to people over a period of time.11
In 1994 Saul visited Lithuania himself and went to look for his great-grandmother’s tombstone, which his father and aunt had erected in 1923. Although he had taken a photograph of the tombstone with him, it was initially hard to locate it in the cemetery. However, within a few minutes he literally tripped over it. He explained the effect that being in this lieu de mémoire had on him:
I’m walking in this cemetery which must have been 20–30 acres, holding the photo. Within three, four minutes I actually trip over a fallen stone, the bricks had weathered and gone, and this is my […] great-grandmother’s tombstone. And it’s the most eerie sensation […] almost as though somebody was guiding me to fall over this. And what was your reaction then? We cleaned it up, said Kaddish.12
What is interesting here is that Saul, who describes himself as a “secular Jew,” turned to an established religious memorial practice, the saying of the Kaddish prayer, in this last resting place of his great-grandmother. While Saul turned to a practice that he has always remembered, Jane Clucas has had to learn about the customs of her Jewish father’s family. Jane lives in Bollington, a small town in the north of England, and has mixed Jewish and non-Jewish ancestry. Although her father’s parents were German Jews, she herself was baptised and was not brought up with any Jewish practices. Jane has been researching her family history for over forty years. She now describes herself as an atheist and sees her Jewishness as an ethnic or racial identity which she expresses through her own forms of religious ritual and cultural practice, such as eating challah, the special plaited loaf eaten on the Sabbath, collecting Jewish religious artefacts, and lighting candles on the eve of the Sabbath:
[…] it certainly has impacted my life far more than I anticipated. If you’d told me 20, 30 years ago that I would have Judaica in my home I would have said, “why? I’m not Jewish.” Which I keep saying, I keep saying that. But now it’s important to me and the making of the challah, it’s important to me, the lighting of the candles – important to me. I can’t explain it because I am an atheist. […] It’s my way of linking with my Jewish ancestry […].13
Much of what she has learnt has come from what she describes as “casual absorption” or reading Jewish cookery books, as she lacks the cultural memory that would enable her to perform these rituals in the accepted way. According to Jan Assmann and John Czaplicka:
The concept of cultural memory comprises that body of reusable text, images, and rituals specific to each society in each epoch, whose “cultivation” serves to stabilize and convey that society’s self-image.14
Jane makes up for this lack in her own way:
[…] what I do now, and have done for several years, is I light two candles on a Friday night. I don’t know what I’m doing, I’m the first to admit I don’t know what I’m doing, but I do wave my hands over the candles and I say “Shabbat, Shabbat shalom” and then sometimes I think, is it that way round or is it “Shalom Shabbat?” So then I’ll say “Shalom Shabbat” because I don’t know which way round it is […]15
In fact neither of these versions is correct as “Shabbat Shalom” is a greeting between people and literally means “a peaceful Sabbath”, and there is an actual blessing which is said when lighting the candles on the eve of the Sabbath. However, I would argue that lacking this cultural memory does not prevent Jane from employing her own personal interpretation of an already complex religion, which together with the display of religious artefacts and expressions of cultural practice enables her to identify with her ancestral heritage and ensure that her father’s Jewish identity is preserved.
Jan Assmann has also distinguished between memory and knowledge, arguing that:
Individuals possess various identities according to the various groups, communities, belief systems, political systems, etc. to which they belong, and equally multifarious are their communicative and cultural, in short: collective memories. […] [T]here are always frames that relate memory to specific horizons of time and identity on the individual, generational, political, and cultural levels. Where this relation is absent, we are not dealing with memory but with knowledge. Memory is knowledge with an identity-index, it is knowledge about oneself […] be it as an individual or as a member of a family, a generation, a community, a nation, or a cultural and religious tradition.16
Genealogy enables people to acquire knowledge about their family, but in the case of those who have lost many family members in the Holocaust there is no memory to underpin this. Dominique Dubois, who lives in London, was born and brought up as a Catholic. He always knew that his mother had come to Britain from Austria just before World War II and that her parents had died during the war, but it was not until he was 54 and began researching her family history that he learned that her family were Jewish. He has now written a very detailed and moving memoir about the family’s life in Vienna, and the subsequent deaths of family members in Treblinka, Auschwitz, and Theresienstadt. Speaking slowly, and choosing his words carefully, he explained its memorialisation function:
I wrote it for two reasons. One, um, as I listened to my mother and what she had been through […] I wanted to pay tribute to what she’d been through, er, as a refugee, er, as a Holocaust survivor, um, all that she had lived through, before fleeing Austria, and after coming here. Um, and then secondly, I wanted to preserve the memory of her family […]17
The memoir also acts as a form of lieu de mémoire. Pierre Nora had suggested that when collective memory is no longer passed on, it becomes necessary for individuals to find ways to recapture those memories in order to maintain cultural identity. As Dominique describes his own feelings you can sense the emotion in his voice – he speaks slowly, with deliberation, sometimes hesitating, as he struggles to find the appropriate expression:
I was first of all just shocked, stunned, and then, very angry about what had happened to my family. Er, but I think much more so is an immense sense of sadness, um, [slight hesitation] yes, there’s a certain sort of, to put like this, a righteous anger, but I think it’s much more the sadness that’s the prevailing feeling, er, of profound loss, profound loss in relation to so many people who were murdered because, because they were Jewish. […] Um, [pause, and then speaks with hesitation] I have moments of enormous desolation, um, and I would say that increases rather than decreases as the years go by. Um, I pushed myself to write the memoir, um, it wasn’t an easy thing to do.18
While Saul Issroff was able to visit and say Kaddish at the grave of his great-grandmother, Dominique has no graves he could visit where he could remember his Jewish family members. Instead, he has participated in an alternative form of memorialisation which takes place in cities in Austria and Germany. Descendants of people who were murdered in the Holocaust arrange for small square memorial plaques to be placed into the pavement near the former homes of their murdered ancestors. These Stolpersteine [literally “stumbling stones”] or Steine der Erinnerung [stones of remembrance] act as lieux de mémoire which will continue to be seen by people passing by. One of the aims of the Stones of Remembrance project in Vienna is: "[…] to remember the destinies of the murdered Jewish people thereby providing a place for them in their former home districts."19
Top right: memorial stone for Katharina Weiss. The other stones have been placed by the descendants of people who lived in the same building. © Dominique Dubois
In this way the murdered residents are symbolically returned to their former homes. Dominique has already had plaques laid for four members of his family outside the Jewish community centre in Vienna’s 2nd district and in September 2019 he arranged a stone-laying ceremony in memory of his great aunt Katharina Weiss outside her former home, where he spoke about her life and that of other members of the family. I was privileged to attend the ceremony. Katharina was deported on 28 June 1942 from Vienna to Terezin, and just under three months later she was sent by train to Treblinka, where she would have been killed within hours of arrival. The ceremony surrounding the placing of the stones is also a performative act representing the burial that could not take place at the time of death, and the stones represent both the coffin and the gravestone, as Dominique explained. His wistfulness is evident in his tone:
[…] none of these relatives had graves, and I think, [slight sigh] looking back, they are, for me, like graves, in a sense that there is a spot somewhere where their names, their dates of birth, um, are recorded, um, the dates of death are, yeah, most of them one knows the year but, er, the actual day, no. And I say grave because, um, it has a function of [slight sigh] somewhere where one can go to, which represents them.20
The memorial function within the physical environment, where the murdered relatives had lived, is of great importance to descendants. In his speech at the ceremony Dominique cited the Holocaust survivor Primo Levi, who believed that “memory is not only a gift, but also a duty.”
Rachel Whiteread’s Nameless Library. © Adrienne Wallman
The ceremonies to install the Stones of Memory are essentially private ceremonies organised by the families of the victims, although some members of the local community also attend, and they take place outside private homes. There are of course many public sites of Holocaust remembrance, often created at the sites where the atrocities took place. People whose family members were murdered in the Holocaust have sometimes contributed in a personal way to these public sites of memory. Merilyn Moos discovered that her mother’s sister, Anna Marie, did not die of liver disease as she had been told, but had been murdered by the Nazis at Brandenburg in June 1940, as part of the T4 euthanasia programme in which some 300,000 people with mental and physical disabilities were murdered. The programme was coordinated from a secret office at Tiergartenstrasse 4 in Berlin. Merilyn has now had a photograph of her aunt placed at the memorial on the Tiergarten site, “so she is marked there.”21 Unlike some of the more symbolic Holocaust memorials, such as Rachel Whiteread’s Nameless Library in the Judenplatz in Vienna, the memorial at Tiergarten utilises both text and images to individualise those who were murdered, thus encouraging a deeper connection with the people commemorated.
Foundation Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe. © Marko Priske
Laurajane Smith has noted:
Heritage is a multilayered performance – be this a performance of visiting, managing, interpretation or conservation – that embodies acts of remembrance and commemoration while negotiating and constructing a sense of place, belonging and understanding in the present.22
Understandings of home, belonging, and relationship with place were shattered by the Holocaust, but these understandings change over the generations and can be reconstructed through memorial practices. Anh Hua has argued:
Memories or nostalgia for homelands, or wounds of dislocations and dispossessions have become important political narratives or metaphorical tools to imagine identity and community and to rewrite the nation of both origin and of settlement. The memory of personal and group experience is essential particularly for oppressed groups.23
Hua is referring here to the nation as an “imagined political community,” in Benedict Anderson’s phrase.24 In some cases members of oppressed groups redefine their self-identity in ways that do not relate to their cultural, ethnic, or religious origins. Merilyn Moos’s parents were of Jewish ancestry, but she explained that they were atheists who had fled the Nazi regime in Germany as political refugees rather than because they were “historically Jewish.”25 While Merilyn has been willing to visit Germany and to contribute to that country’s memorialisation of her murdered family members, she was emphatic that her parents had wanted nothing further to do with their country of birth after they had made their home in Britain. Dominique’s mother Elfriede, on the other hand, had a more subtle and nuanced relationship with her places of birth and subsequent residence. Elfriede came from a Viennese Jewish family. Her mother Valerie had been successful in arranging for her to escape to Britain in May 1939, on her own, on the trainee nurses scheme.26 While she continued to live in the country for most of the rest of her life, working as a lecturer at Newcastle University for thirty years, Dominique said she never defined herself as British:
Culturally, she was immensely attached to France, […] it was a great passion for her, her husband was French, she just loved Paris. […] I said […], at one point late in her life […], did she feel British and she said “no.” She said “I’m grateful that the country took me in,” but she felt an outsider. […] She was very grateful that they accepted her, that she could live here, but she never said she belonged. Once she departed in May ’39 she was an outsider for the rest of her life. In quite obvious, in obvious ways but in quite subtle ways too.27
Some months after recording this first interview I met Dominique again and he told me he had been given some letters that his mother had sent to friends in Austria just after the war. These show that, in spite of having to flee, she still felt an immense attachment to what she described as “our country.” In February 1949 she wrote to her friend Reinhild:
Your beautiful card for Christmas is a tender memory of my country such as I now rarely receive […] I can easily imagine what the difficult post-war years have meant for everyone in our country.28
Dominique explained that reading these letters had led him to what he described as an “unfolding understanding” of his mother’s Austrian heritage. As he put it to me, there is a difference between “home,” the place where one lives now, and “belonging,” the place or home country where one has one’s roots.29 He had described a visit to Vienna with his mother in 1961 when he was twelve years old:
[…] we were on a tram, and suddenly my mother stood up and said “we used to live over there” and […] it stayed with me all my life, you know, um, fifty-eight years later I can remember like yesterday, […] so the letters […] have brought home to me […] this very deep attachment to what she called her home country.30
In this sense Austria is the “home country,” where Dominique believed his mother felt she belonged. However, Dominique is ambivalent about his own relationship to Austria and Austrian identity. He explained his conflicted feelings when, after an earlier visit to Vienna with his wife Ruth, she asked him if he would like to live there:
Ruth asked me after about a week – we spent a fortnight in Vienna – would I like to live there, and I struggled. It’s, it’s my mother’s roots, um, on the other hand I feel so sad that, how my mother had to leave, and indeed my grandparents and other members of the family, and at the moment there’s an attempt going through parliament, in Austria, to give people like myself Austrian nationality, and I really don’t know what I want. […] Whether I would wish to apply for Austrian nationality, I don’t know.31
Setha M. Low has identified “six kinds of symbolic linkage of people and land,” including “genealogical linkage to the land through history or family lineage” and “linkage through loss of land or destruction of community.”32 Low goes on to define the memorial processes which enable individuals to reclaim this attachment to lost environments in the future:
Place attachment through loss or destruction is activated retrospectively, through the process of losing the place and the subsequent reminiscing and re-creating through memory of a place that is now destroyed, uninhabited, or inaccessible.33
Elfriede Dubois can be said to have been retrospectively activating her attachment to Austria and Vienna through the acknowledgement of the location of her former home. Karen Lebon has retrospectively activated her attachment to her family’s lost homeland in Tarnow, Galicia, through genealogical research. Karen lives in Benenden, a small town in rural Kent in South East England, and she is a bell-ringer in her local church. She is the daughter of a Jewish father and non-Jewish mother. When she was a child her father had told her that she was half-Jewish, a term she did not really understand at the time. She now describes her identity as “[…] probably Church of England but with Jewish ancestry, and I definitely feel a pull towards the Jewish ancestral roots.”34
Karen had known her paternal great-grandfather as James Whitefield, a man who had owned a chocolate factory in England. However, she had been told that he was originally from Austria and that his surname was a translation of the name Weissfeld. Her genealogical research later revealed that he was born Jakob Weissfeld in Tarnow, Galicia, which was then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. In her meticulously researched family history, Karen has reproduced a copy of the entry for Jakob in the population register for the Kraków district, listing his birth as 1872 in Tarnow, as well as a copy of his naturalisation certificate of 1913, when he was living in Essex in England. She also lists entries for his siblings.35
There had been a Jewish presence in Tarnow since the mid-15th century. In 1939 the Jewish population was about 25,000, almost half the population of the city.36 This population was destroyed in the Holocaust. In 1942 several hundred people were murdered by machine gun fire in the main square, while hundreds more were sent to the extermination camp at Belzec. During this same period several thousand Jews, including 800 children from the Tarnow orphanage, were shot to death in the Buczyna forest a few miles outside the city. Over the next two years there were further deportations and murders, and in February 1944 the city was declared Judenrein [cleansed of Jews].37 Jonathan Webber movingly describes the obliteration of the memory of the 800 children murdered in Tarnow:
Not only were those eight hundred children brutally murdered; their killers achieved the complete and intentional erasure of their innocent lives from all memory. We shall never know anything about those eight hundred children; their memory is lost for ever [sic].38
While Karen and her family cannot replace the lost Jewish community of Tarnow, her genealogical research has produced evidence from which others can learn and she herself, living in a rural town in southern England and ringing the bells in her local church – where she says she often thinks about her Jewish ancestry – has “assumed responsibility,” as Pierre Nora puts it, for maintaining the memory of a part of Galician Jewry.
By gathering family stories from older members of the family, collecting and collating information from archives, writing memoirs based on their research, and learning and carrying out relevant memorial and cultural practices, these genealogists have assembled their own lieux de mémoire. Low and Altman have identified two crucial hallmarks of place attachment:
[…] place attachments are integral to self-definitions of individuals, as well as to community members’ sense of group identity [and] affect, emotion and feeling are central to the concept.39
These hallmarks have been in evidence within the testimony cited. Genealogy is an affective practice which provides a crucial emotional link between individuals and the wider social and cultural environment of its practitioners and that of their ancestors. The practice and tools of genealogy enable a specific form of place attachment to be realised, by bringing about a lessening of temporal and spatial distancing between generations.
As Laurajane Smith has noted,
The real sense of heritage, the real moment of heritage when our emotions and sense of self are truly engaged, is […] in the act of passing on and receiving memories and knowledge. It also occurs in the way that we then use, reshape and recreate those memories and knowledge to help us make sense of and understand not only who we ‘are’, but also who we want to be.40
In the case of all five interviewees, the practice of genealogy has enabled them to reach this real moment of heritage and to fulfil Pierre Nora’s “duty to remember,” thus ensuring that the lost environments of their ancestors will be preserved in memory.
Water Histories and Heritage: Spaces, Institutions, and Cultures41
Carola Hein, Tino Mager, Roberto Rocco, Henk van Schaik, and Diederik Six
Delft University of Technology (The Netherlands)
Over centuries, people have developed and carefully refined spaces and cultures in relation to water. Their knowledge of nature has helped them survive over thousands of years and create artifacts that have sustained societies around the world. Living with water has involved the creation of a system of institutions and practices, as well as buildings, cities, and landscapes that embody the lived history of water heritage and its adaptations to local geographies, histories, and cultural norms and conventions.
Today’s institutions and practices are embedded in historic physical structures and traditions. Spatial forms and intangible cultures have created so-called path dependencies, in line with historical institutionalism, which continue to influence our thinking about the future.42 To give just one example: for many centuries and in many parts of the world, the predominant approach to combatting floods has been resistance. As notably seen in the Netherlands, large and strong systems of coastal defenses, dykes, and other engineering structures have been developed to keep water under control. While largely protecting the country against floods, in some cases this approach has proved increasingly ineffective and has been slowly replaced by a different type of thinking based on the concept of resilience, in which natural systems are preserved and often rebuilt in order to allow for a more harmonious integration of urban life and landscape.43 The question of how contemporary societies are going to address water-related challenges is just one example of the complex relationship between water, institutions, and tangible and intangible heritage.44
Beyond a limited number of case studies, the role of water in shaping institutions, territories, spaces, and cultural practices is still relatively understudied.45 Historical research can contribute to understanding how water management has shaped power structures, social biases, and ethical values related to water, as well as the role of buildings, infrastructures, and landscapes. Such investigation is linked with various fields of inquiry, such as discussions on planetary urbanisation, the Historic Urban Landscape approach, hydro-biographies, or deep mapping.46 Water-related heritage preserves and passes on the (neglected) best practices and the memory of catastrophic events. It harbors the long histories of water systems and adds to the cultural memory for generations to come. In the following sections, we will offer an overview on how water shapes heritage, while also shaping cultures and territories.
A deeper knowledge of the spaces and practices around water is key to understanding how societies face the challenges connected to life on this planet. This understanding is also intimately linked to the development of creative practices around water that will allow societies to thrive in the future. Developing a climate-adapted water system requires collaboration and action among diverse public, private, and civic partners, as well as open and participatory practices based on a collective (rather than merely professional) understanding of water systems. Stakeholder engagement is relevant to creating more sustainable societies, as it allows for the building of support for policies and measures that ensure good water management, as well as the gathering of non-professional knowledge that supports effective policy-making and design. Intangible heritage in the form of cultural practices connected to how societies traditionally manage and live with water is a basic element of sustainability.
Around the world people are facing urgent challenges in terms of their relationship with water – how they live with it, manage it, and engage with water-related cultural heritage. Some of the most pressing challenges involve climate change, rapid urbanisation, environmental degradation, and migration. Several of the UN Sustainable Development Goals are directly (6, 14) and indirectly (3, 13, 15) linked to water challenges.47 Worldwide, policy makers, professionals, academics, and citizens are grappling with huge uncertainties posed by sea-level rise, storm surges, drought, salinisation and soil subsidence, drinking water shortages, water pollution, and increased demand for agricultural irrigation. Careful analysis and comprehensive understanding of the spaces and practices of the past can help to better assess current risks and ultimately also to design sustainable water futures.
The Water and Heritage for the Future initiative – a cooperation between Delft University of Technology, the Leiden-Delft-Erasmus Centre for Global Heritage and Development, and ICOMOSNL – researches water heritage sites and their potential contribution to current and upcoming water needs. For the purpose of this research, it was necessary to define water heritage broadly. Water heritage is not just related to engineering structures, buildings, or landscapes, nor to traditions and cultural practices. It is a complex system intimately connected to the questions of how societies organise their socio-spatial practices, carefully negotiated over time. Many of these structures cross administrative and sometimes national borders. The theme thus connects to the issues of democracy, participation, and power. Historical knowledge about more or less successful water related strategies can help to identify sustainable processes, understand their prerequisites and parameters, and thus optimise future decisions. Traditional ways of governing and managing water can teach us about harmonious coexistence between people and natural systems, which must be preserved and promoted.
New investigations of water history and heritage can help us move forward with sustainable and resilient water management; they are relevant to the redevelopment, redesign, and reuse of existing and ancient water systems, as well as to the design of new systems. Historical systems can make an important contribution to the resilience and quality of life of communities, and to their sense of place and identity. Finally, understanding and analysing the diverse aspects of water-related heritage can also help us refine our understanding of heritage more broadly. It also holds important advice and inspiration for future development.
A thorough and structured understanding of centuries-old, tangible structures and intangible practices can provide insight into earlier moments of water transitions and the long-term implications of policies and structures, focusing on access as well as opportunities for the design of everyday life spaces. Of course, around the world there are many differences in terms of geography, climate, cultural and political contexts, economic and social settings, societal models, and also different attitudes towards present and future threats. Scholars and policymakers must closely examine these differences to understand water politics, policy, and management, as well as future design opportunities. When research into the past is closely linked to forward-looking practices in engineering, architectural design, and planning, heritage can become an integral part of future solutions and a means through which the design of future sustainable practices can be achieved. A multidisciplinary, cross-temporal, and global analysis is needed to explore the relationship between water and heritage based on thorough theoretical and methodological investigation and carefully executed case studies.
In addition to studying historical water structures and identifying examples of best practice, it is also crucial to close the institutional gaps between heritage and water organisations. Three conferences have been important milestones in our collaboration so far: Protection Deltas: Heritage Helps, Amsterdam 2013, Water and Heritage for the Future, Delft and Fort Vechten 2016, and the 2019 International Conference “Water as Heritage,” Chiayi 2019, where water engineers, planners, policymakers, and heritage professionals began to engage in a continuous dialogue – a prerequisite for opening up the historical knowledge and experience embedded in water heritage sites and practices. The conference publications48 are important stepping stones in the process of developing international scientific interest and an international scientific agenda on water and heritage. They bring into discussion water and heritage issues through the lens of international cases, while providing deeper insight into the Dutch case. The publications are complemented by a special issue of the European Journal of Creative Practices in Cities and Landscapes,49 focusing on water resilience.
Five thematic areas related to water heritage are explored in Adaptive Strategies for Water Heritage: infrastructure designed for drinking water; agricultural sites engineered for irrigation and drainage; areas gained by poldering (the act of making polders) and other land reclamation in agriculture, settlement, and defence systems; river and coastline planning; and urban and engineered structures in ports and on waterfronts. They are outlined in the following section.
Fig. 1. The Chand Baori stepwell near the village of Abhaneri in the Indian state of Rajasthan. © Chetan
Service water infrastructures are largely underappreciated in their role as heritage. Drinking water systems are important both as physical structures and in light of social and societal practices. Some historic structures and practices, such as Indian stepped water tanks, and the communal water practices that created and sustained them, have attracted scholarly attention (Fig. 1). While these and other structures, such as the Roman aqueducts and sewage canals, are famous, few people may appreciate the heritage quality of the New York water system.50 Partly due to their character of invisible underground infrastructure, these systems, distinguished for their utility, have received less attention than World Heritage Sites listed for their aesthetics, even though infrastructural sites can teach us much that will help us respond to future crises. Areas in which the provisioning of water suffers from ongoing or accelerated desertification are equally threatened. Ingenious systems such as the qanat of the Middle East and northern Africa (a type of underground water transportation system) are often extremely vulnerable to relatively small changes in climate, precipitation, political and social organisation, and the exchange and transmission of local specialised knowledge.51 Water management interventions, such as the drilling of deep wells after World War II, have larger governmental and cultural implications, which hold important lessons for future practices.
Fig. 2. John Constable, Water-meadows near Salisbury, 1820, Victoria and Albert Museum, London © Creative Commons
Design proposals can build on and derive from historic water systems. In Monte Albán, a site which originates in ancient Oaxaca in Mexico, and has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1993, the supply system of water – consisting mainly of natural rivers and tributaries – has defined the infrastructure of settlements while serving as vessels of ritual meaning. Looking ahead, Araceli Rojas and Nahuel Beccan Dávila52 suggest that design solutions based on the historic water system can inspire designers to formulate new strategies for preserving the natural environment and archaeological heritage, while improving living conditions for local people.53 Understanding Dutch heritage in freshwater management provides insight in terms of the spatial and social impact of changes from traditional decentralised practices of public and private rainwater harvesting that have largely disappeared, replaced by centralised water supply systems. This heritage contains potential for creating an integrated approach to water supply, landscape conservation, and water-secure livable cities.54
Questions of access to and distribution of water are also part of many irrigation systems around the world, such as water meadows (see John Constable’s painting Water-meadows near Salisbury, 1820, Fig. 2). Other historic engineered water infrastructure systems include those that improved agricultural land, like meadows and rice paddies – structures that are intimately related to modes of societal organisation and narrative construction. Restoration of derelict water meadows in northwestern and central Europe, Slovakia, and Norway can help create and advance regional identity on a European scale and, at the same time, restore biodiversity, improve water retention capacity, and promote tourism and local understanding of historical cultural values. Similarly, the ways in which Dutch land reclamation technology expanded throughout Europe in the form of the Holler colonies provide tangible evidence of a common European economic and social history.55
Communities that have grown around shared water practices such as rice growing have had to develop practices of conflict resolution. Understanding how water management shapes society is an important theme for countries around the world. The role of public and private historians in writing about these interventions is a theme for analysis in itself.56 Many historical water structures both addressed the water-related needs of a location and created social communities. Modern technological interventions have often ignored this intricate balance. Recent climate shifts have emphasised the shortcomings of these systems, as illustrated by the case of the Taoyuan Tableland, where a pond and canal system originally built under the influence of generations of foreign colonists, immigrants, and experts has deteriorated. Using what authors Sinite Yu, Chung-His Lin, Hsiaoen Wu, Wenyao Hsu, and Yu-Chuan Chang57 call “participatory narrative weaving,” the locals have successfully challenged further development plans for the area.
Water management on land can take on various forms: creating land for agriculture or urbanisation and defending that land against attacks. In coastal and alluvial lowlands all over the world58 historic water management projects blocked water from some areas of land and controlled water levels artificially so that people could live and work on the reclaimed land. This often centuries-old interaction between humans and water has produced a rich variety of polder landscapes. Increasing flood risk due to sea level rise and increased climate turbulence, ongoing subsidence due to intense drainage, and rapid urbanisation all call for protective action.
The construction of the Hachirogata polder in Northern Honshu, the largest and most highly populated island of Japan, exemplifies the ways in which heritage is a result of history writing.59 The polder is celebrated as an important industrial heritage; however, its narrative rarely acknowledges the traditional fishing practices destroyed by its very construction. The preservation and development of the Dutch Noordoostpolder – built in the 20th century – and its consequent development as a cultural heritage landscape tells a parallel story.60 The construction of polders, which notably involved Dutch expertise, is a Europe-wide phenomenon and one that may support the creation of a common identity. The Europolder programme showcases the contemporary benefits of these heritage sites for tourism and regional identity.61
Other human interventions in water management were designed to protect land against invasion. A unique example of such a large-scale historical water-related site that has been preserved and redesigned is the New Dutch Waterline, an historic defense line.62 The preservation of this large monument has provided an innovative design connection between water, heritage, and tourism at entirely new scales of intervention.
People around the world have created a broad range of heritage practices along riverbanks and on river waterfronts. Andrew Law examines the Yangtze River as an evolving landscape, what he calls a “heritage of becoming.” His contribution raises the matter of new digital technologies, including augmented reality tools and their potential to shape heritage debates. The necessity of conceiving of heritage as part of a long-lasting creative process in spatial transformation and public and private participation also involves construction and reconstruction, use and reuse, public and private stakeholders, and civil society over time.63 A detailed analysis of industry closures and undervalued heritage, along with recent attempts at revitalisation, show both the power and opportunities of artistic and cultural projects and of participatory approaches. The story of Alblasserdam is just one example; a broader study of riverfront heritage in urban and rural settings remains to be done. It is important not to limit attention to individual spaces of select waterfront redevelopment, but to consider the entire river with its multiple heritage questions as a single entity. Such a comprehensive investigation needs to examine cultural practices as well as depictions – such as in this depiction of Europe through its rivers.
Dutch engineers have responded to the results of centuries of water management by providing new spaces for rivers in the Netherlands, thus addressing the questions of both safety and spatial quality.64 These include the genesis of an attractive living environment and a valuing of the presence of cultural history. Coastal regions in Europe need to work together to address the common challenges and shared opportunities of coastal tourism. As Linde Egberts65 appropriately reminds us, old coastal towns were better connected to other port cities over the sea than to some of their neighbours on land. Water is linked to conflict also in other ways. The fortress of Suomenlinna in Finland has a rich history of periods under Swedish, Russian, and Finnish governance.
In recent years interactions between ports and their cities have led to debates on the reuse of former port areas and old harbor heritage. The history of the former shipbuilding company RDM (Rotterdamsche Droogdok Maatschappij) and the city’s renewal of the waterfront to attract cruise ship tourists are one example (Fig. 3).66 Cruise ships have a major impact on port cities and waterfront heritage. Supersudaca have demonstrated this through their research on the historical and contemporary logics of the emergence of Caribbean heritage and recent fake heritage buildings in Caribbean cruise destinations.67 Sustainable development plays an important role in the redevelopment of waterfronts such as that of Lisbon; José Manuel Pagés Sánchez and Tom Daamen68 have emphasised the switch from an object-based to a landscape-based approach to heritage. This strategy is based on a governance process that facilities collaboration between port and city authorities.
Fig. 3. New development and a cruise ship at the historic Wilhelminapier in Rotterdam. © Frans Berkelaar
Cultural heritage is constructed on our selective understanding of the past, as Han Meyer69 points out. He asserts the need to recognise that buildings, deltas, and nature itself are adaptive and evolutionary; in other words, to overcome a narrative of human engineering resisting nature, as it has emerged in the 20th century, moving towards one of dynamic adaptation. Such a reconsideration of cultural heritage is particularly necessary at this time of climate change and the many attendant challenges it holds for urbanised delta regions. Extensive heritage sites on urban waterfronts and working ports and cities are of particular concern. Meyer contends that the cultural and natural heritage of urbanising deltas itself will help us develop an adaptive approach, not as a complete departure from the present ways of doing things, but as a new stage in a centuries-long tradition.
Water heritage systems throughout the world are comprised of physical and functional structures, conceptual and organisational principles, and cultural and spiritual values. This stands despite their many differences in geographical location, climate, cultural and political context, economic and social setting, heritage, and future threats. Scholars and policymakers must closely examine these differences to understand and tune research designs and approaches in politics, policy, and management, as well as future design opportunities.70 Moreover, historical and archaeological studies are often able to clarify when and why systems are more or less efficient and what the conditions of exploitation or overexploitation are in the past, writ large, and in the recent past.71 When research into former times is closely linked to forward-looking practices in engineering, architectural design, and planning, heritage can become an integral part of the future as well as a means through which a design of future sustainable practices can be achieved. Rather than an end, our effort seeks to catalyse international interest among policymakers, planners, architects, and heritage specialists to integrate planning with the management of water-related heritage. Since substantiation is only in its beginnings, this article does not contain definite conclusions but rather ends with a promise that the work will be continued.
The five themes listed above examine several of the most important purposes of water management: drinking water supply and sewage, agriculture, land reclamation, protection, defence, transport, and trade. Many important subjects have not been touched upon fully (for example, the role of canals and sewage systems in water heritage) and merit further examination. Canals have played a pioneering role in human cultural development. Their planning and implementation require extensive collective effort as well as good hydraulic and topographical knowledge that specifically includes that of the construction of locks, dikes, bridges, and harbours. Sewage systems have also been of great importance in the development of larger settlements. They have facilitated the hygienic conditions that are a prerequisite for the capacity of larger communities to live together in confined spaces. Today, disposal is a fundamental problem in many overpopulated and fast-growing regions of the world. It is a problem which can be seen in the state of many watercourses, rendered as abused flowing dumps that contribute to marine pollution. This development itself often necessitates restructuring watercourses and constructing reservoirs, which, in turn, entails environmental risks.
Other, larger themes, such as water and energy generation, natural, industrial, and urbanised waterscapes, water narratives, legal issues, and education also merit additional attention. For example, water has been used for energy generation for thousands of years, and even today water power can make a significant contribution as a renewable energy source. Further research into the various ways that using water power can help regions solve local energy problems while safeguarding ecological balance would be of great benefit. To date, the discussion on water and heritage has largely neglected the issues of the open sea. New scholarship is emerging on the “urbanisation of the oceans” (their increased use for shipping, raw material extraction, energy production, and the siting of pipelines, cables, and other networks are material concerns). However, research and investigation into water heritage cannot stop here. Issues of future heritage, including contemporary container terminals and oil refineries have to be considered as well. The question of whether and how to preserve drilling rigs and other sea-based constructions as heritage is also now being addressed.72 Reflection on future heritage is important as the energy transition will (hopefully) leave many abandoned oil sites for which a narrative needs to be constructed. There is an excellent opportunity to shape a new heritage approach that engages critically with our petroleum addiction that is at the base of climate change. These concerns all call for deeper research into historically grounded solutions. The long-term consequences of their consideration can be of help to planners and policymakers in integrating historical knowledge and experience into future-oriented and sustainable solutions that are resilient, balanced, and durable.
Following the activities of actors in the Netherlands, international interest has grown in the significance of water-related cultural heritage for present and future water management challenges and opportunities. ICOMOS is preparing an International Scientific Committee on Water and Heritage. The UNESCO International Water Conference, held in Paris in May 2019, called on the participants to continue and intensify the dialogue between water and heritage practitioners and professionals in order to increase knowledge of water-related heritage in planning and policymaking in the context of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. That call was followed by the International Symposium on Water and Culture held in Tokyo on 3 February 2020, organised by the United Nations Secretary Generals’ High Experts Level and Leaders Panel on Water and Disasters (HELP) and ICOMOS The Netherlands, and chaired by Dr. Han Seung-soo, Chair of HELP and the former prime minister of the Republic of Korea. The Tokyo symposium points to a new horizon for the local and global water dialogue process, including the UN High-level Meeting on Water in 2021, and the UN Water Decade’s Mid-term Review in 2023. The fields, institutions, and approaches to water management and cultural heritage management are gradually starting to find each other. The UN Valuing Water Principles can help bring experts in water-related heritage and cultural values into conversation with contemporary practices in line with its mission to create a “conceptual framework for making better decisions impacting water.”73 Hopefully, the notion of “culture-based solutions” for sustainable water futures will be included in the SDGs by the UN Water Decade’s Mid-term Review in 2023.
Common-sense Discourses of Nature: A Gramscian Analysis of Conservation Designations in the Scottish Highlands
Zoe Russell
The University of Stirling (The United Kingdom)
There is no singular “nature” simply out there waiting to be conserved74 and meanings of nature are multiple, biased, and contradictory.75 Despite arguments for contextually-specific ways of knowing nature, there remains a persistent nature–culture dichotomy underpinning nature conservation,76 problematically separating human action from the natural environment. Scotland has a complex and layered framework of statutory nature conservation designations used to protect and conserve nature; in fact, over a quarter of Scottish land is covered by such designations.77 This paper examines the discourses of nature produced through such conservation designations and the implications for human–environment interaction. The research is based on a critical documentary analysis of nature conservation designations over time, using the Gramscian concept of “common sense” to critique the nature–culture dichotomy. The first section introduces contextual literature on neo-liberal conservation and the Myth of the Highlands. The next explains the methodological approach taken before the main findings are presented. It is argued that as elsewhere, nature conservation designations in Scotland have reproduced the nature–culture dichotomy through prescribing desirable levels and forms of human–environment interaction. Additionally, common-sense discourses of nature are shown to emerge from within notions of natural heritage as a national asset tied to the Scottish state. Finally, there is a discussion of alternative nature–cultures and suggestions are made for directing future research in this area.
Framing this critical study of nature conservation designations from a social, historical, and political perspective are two main areas of study: neoliberal conservation and the Myth of the Highlands. The first arises from the broader context of studies concerning the “neoliberalisation of nature” within contemporary capitalism78 and is based on the argument that nature protection and capitalism go hand-in-hand, with conservation as a site of capitalist accumulation.79 Specifically, natures are subject to processes of commodification, marketisation, financialisation, and transformation into natural capital as well as payments for ecosystem services through nature conservation and eco-tourism initiatives.80 The notion of accumulation by dispossession,81 a feature of neoliberalism, reiterates how accumulation occurs via enclosures of land through conservation as an ongoing process82 causing displacement. The enclosures of land (including to create protected areas) fence off physical space, displacing people in the process,83 but also create new ways of seeing and being in the world.84 For example, central to neoliberal conservation is the idea that nature can only be “saved” by its submission to capital.85 In Gramscian terms, neoliberal conservation is a hegemonic practice where elite interests are universalised, and alternatives suppressed.86 Gramsci’s ideas have been used in analyses of nature-society relations87 and his concepts of the historical bloc and hegemony have been utilised to examine biodiversity conservation and capitalist expansion, sustainable development, and conservation governance.88 Few studies have applied Gramscian theory in the Scottish context, however, despite its relevance to the “Myth of the Highlands.”
The Myth of the Highlands is a phrase that captures the essence of the nature-culture dichotomy. It refers to the ideological representations of Scottish Highland landscapes as natural and wild, which have been taken as reality rather than myth.89 This social construction of the Highlands as untouched nature emerged throughout the historic periods of economic and social “improvements,” romanticisation, and Balmoralisation, each denying the actual conditions of existence, specifically the landscapes’ social and cultural history, and the lives of inhabitants.90 In contemporary Scotland the conservation of seemingly natural or wild landscapes occurs extensively in the Gàidhealtachd91 in the same areas where the Highland Clearances dispossessed people of their lands. Hence, for some, nature conservation is understood through the lenses of internal colonialism and capitalist expansion,92 while for others it is considered an abuse towards Gaelic heritage and culture.93 This situation is not unique to Scotland, as evident in the neoliberal conservation literature, but also the broader critique of the ideology of wilderness94 and fortress conservation, the latter separating people from nature through protected areas and viewing human use of nature as a threat to conservation efforts.95 Hence resulting conflicts over rights to nature, for example in Scotland the struggle between crofters and conservationists over the right to use “wild” land.96 This can be contextualised by different attitudes towards land use. Traditional views position land as a resource to make a living via agriculture (such as crofting), whereas post-romantic views perceive land as a refuge for nature, worthy of protection for its own sake.97 The former tends to originate with those living in the Highlands and the latter from outsiders and visitors to the region.98 This draws attention to the dynamics of conflict between Gaelic cultural heritage and the romanticised “back-to-nature” sensibilities of modern environmentalism held by outsiders and incomers to the Highlands.99
From the basis of the above literatures, nature-culture relations can be viewed as involving the continual social construction of both nature and culture within broader capitalist processes. There is a need for further analysis of the ways in which natures are being shaped ideologically through conservation and dominant discourses in the Scottish context. Thus, the paper herein aims to understand discourses of nature produced through conservation by drawing on a Gramscian political ecology contextualised historically by the Myth of the Highlands.
Whilst considering national policies, with relevance to the Scottish Highlands, a further regional focus on the North-West Highlands was adopted. The Wester Ross region is an excellent case study for exploring themes identified in the literature, given the multitude of designations in the area. It has the largest National Scenic Area (NSA) in Scotland, the first National Nature Reserve (NNR) designated in the UK, and many Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI), which are mapped for Scotland in Fig. 1. It also has numerous Wild Land Areas (WLA), which are mapped for Scotland in Fig. 2, a Marine Protected Area (MPA), and UNESCO Biosphere Reserve (BR), the latter shown in Fig. 3.
Additionally, there are other European designations, and national park status has been discussed for the area, but never designated. Alongside nature conservation, the region has a history of crofting,100