Cultural Heritage: Perspectives, Challenges and Future Directions

$210.00

Sofie S. Berg (Editor)
Eric Fiedler (Editor)

Series: Social Issues, Justice and Status
BISAC: SOC002010

In this book, the authors begin by discussing research on the digitalization of cultural heritage, illuminating the centralization and specific conservatism of digitization in Poland, a low level of access to digitized objects, and poor acclimatization to user needs. Next, a study is presented on the ethical and legal aspects of shipwrecks with a complex ownership status due to the waters they lie in and because their cargo may belong to a community that was colonised, to one that does not exist today, or to a state whose territory belongs to a different, new state. This chapter concentrates on the varied formulas for shipwreck claim, as well as the debates on state succession for underwater cultural heritage and on the return of cultural objects found in shipwrecks. Next, an investigation is offered on the dimensions of design intervention for territorial Cultural Heritage, from the typology of the object of intervention to the scale of intervention, up to identifying the specific actions that can be implemented.

The authors go on to review cultural policy agendas of the EU from the macro perspective in the context of EU’s Europeana project as a case of digital humanities. Additionally, they discuss how the Europeana project is currently executed and what approach it is focused on. Documentation of cultural heritage is examined as a necessity, with its importance exemplified in today’s tempestuous world, where many monuments vanish because of the advancement of human society, indifference, vandalism, terrorism, and other reasons. The new technologies established based on computer processing, laser technology, and geophysical principles are discussed. Next, a paper is presented with the goal of determining which non-invasive methods give the instructions for preparing the proper facsimile, or “reprint of an out-of-print book that represents an identical reproduction of the original.” In the final chapter, the authors deliberate on the modification of Building Information Modeling methodology to address the modeling and management of heritage/historic buildings, resulting in Heritage/Historic Building Information Modeling. (Imprint: Nova)

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Preface

Chapter 1. Digitalized Heritage in the European Union and Poland: Policies, Strategies, and Online Practices
(Mariusz Dziêglewski, PhD, Aldona Guzik, PhD, and Marta Juza, PhD, Department of Humanities, Pedagogical University of Cracow, Cracow, Poland)

Chapter 2. Nationless Shipwrecks: State Succession Applied to Underwater Cultural Heritage
(Elena Perez-Alvaro, PhD, Licit Cultural Heritage Ltd, Cambridge, UK)

Chapter 3. An Introduction to Design as a Tool for the Enhancement of Local Cultural Heritage: A Possible Methodological Approach and Experiences from Politecnico Di Torino
(Marco Bozzola and Claudia De Giorgi, Department of Architecture and Design, Politecnico di Torino, Torino Italy)

Chapter 4. Digital Cultural Heritage in the EU and the Creative Europe Project
(Jong Youl Hong, Minerva College, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, Seoul, Korea)

Chapter 5. Modern Documentation Methods in Cultural Heritage and Its Benefits
(Karel Pavelka, Department of Geomatics, Czech Technical University in Prague, Faculty of Civil Engineering, Prague, Czech Republic)

Chapter 6. From BIM to HBIM: Current State and Perspectives
(Pilar Merchán, Belén Rivera, Santiago Salamanca, and María José Merchán, Department of Electrical, Electronic and Automatic Engineering, University of Extremadura, Badajoz, Spain)

Index

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