ABSTRACT

Historicising Heritage and Emotions examines how heritage is connected to and between people and places through emotion, both in the past and today. Discussion is focused on the overlapping categories of blood (families and bloodlines), stone (monuments and memorials) and land (landscape and places imbued with memories), with the contributing authors exploring the ways in which emotions invest heritage with affective power, and the transformative effects of this power in individual, community and cultural contexts.

The 13 chapters that make up the volume take examples from the premodern and modern eras, and from two connected geographical regions, the United Kingdom, and Australia and the Pacific. Each chapter seeks to identify, historicise and contextualise the processes of heritage and the emotional regimes at play, locating the processes within longer historical and transnational genealogies and critically appraising them as part of broader cultural currents. Theoretically grounded in new approaches to the history of emotions and critical heritage studies, the analysis challenges the traditional scholarly focus on heritage in its modern forms, offering multifaceted premodern and modern case studies that demonstrate heritage and emotion to have complex and vibrant histories.

Offering transhistorical and multidisciplinary discussion around the ways in which we can talk about, discuss, categorise and theorise heritage and emotion in different historical contexts, Historicising Heritage and Emotions is a valuable resource for students and scholars interested in heritage, emotions and history.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

Historicising heritage and emotions

part I|1 pages

Affective histories of blood, stone and land in Medieval and Early Modern Britain

chapter 1|15 pages

Carved in stone

Engaging with the past in Medieval Orkney

chapter 2|17 pages

Wulfstan of Worcester’s weeping

The architecture of the Norman Conquest as a site of cross-cultural emotion

chapter 3|16 pages

John Hardyng’s Scotland

Emotional geographies and forged heritage in the fifteenth century

chapter 4|17 pages

Sacred memory

The Elizabethan monuments of Westminster Abbey

chapter 5|15 pages

Emotional lineages

Blood, property, family and affection in Early Modern Scotland

chapter 6|15 pages

‘Let me weep for such a feeling loss’

The emotional significance of Shakespeare’s heritage

part II|1 pages

Affective histories of blood, stone and land in Australia and the Pacific

chapter 8|14 pages

The crimson thread of medievalism

Haematic heritage and transhistorical mood in colonial Australia

chapter 10|15 pages

‘The general softening of manners among us’

Music and the moral power of nostalgia in a colonial penal colony

chapter 11|15 pages

Murdering Snow and ruling the north

The rise and fall of affective colonialism and the advent of heritage tourism in New Zealand

chapter 12|16 pages

Convict bloodlines

Crime, intergenerational legacies and convict heritage

chapter 13|20 pages

The Esplanade and the City Gatekeepers

Contesting the limits of urban heritage protection