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List of contents
Introduction: Flowing consciousness and the becoming of waterscapes Part 1: Cultural Visions 1. On the waterfront 2. Towards homogeneous waterfronts? Historical woodworking waterfronts in transition 3. Salmonscapes and shipyards: Versions of heritage on the River Tyne 4. "A Sign of good Neighborliness": Images of the Saimaa Canal in the Soviet Union 5. Women's labor and cultural heritage: Laundries, collective memory and the Canal du Midi 6. Contested subterranean waterscapes: lead mining soughs disputes in Derbyshire’s Derwent Valley 7. The rock behind the lagoon: the Dolomites in the iconography of Venice 8. Going along the liquid chronotope: the Po Delta waterscape through Gianni Celati’s narration Part 2: Touristic perspectives 9. Canals: an old form of transport transformed into a new form of heritage tourism experience 10. Recreational countryside and the riverscape aesthetic: Northwest Croatian hydrography as a sustainable tourism destination 11. Experiencing historic waterways and water landscapes of the Vistula river Delta 12. Tourism and Scotland’s canals: a 21st Century transformation 13. New possibilities for tourism on the banks of the Manzanares river in Madrid 14. The Fonséranes lock on the Canal du Midi: Representation, reality and renovation of a heritage site 15. Digital applications and river heritage: The inherited landscape of Venice’s historic waterways 16. Conclusion: Toward a humanistic hydrology
About the author
Francesco Vallerani is professor of geography at the University Ca’ Foscari of Venice, Italy. His main fields of expertise are human and cultural geography, landscape evolution and heritage, with special focuses on waterscapes and water-based sustainable tourism in both European and South American countries.
Francesco Visentin is a human geographer with research interests in sustainable tourism and cultural history. His research focuses on water and rural landscapes changes especially in Italy, Spain and England. He is currently a fellow research at the Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, Italy, involved in some projects concerning cultural heritage tourism.
Summary
This book explores the role of waterways as a form of heritage, culture, and sense of place and the potential of this to underpin the development of cultural tourism.
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"Waterways and the Cultural Landscape offers glimpses of waterways’ future prospects, noting, for example, the potential for digital appreciation. One might hope the editors’ optimistic vision for human–water relations comes to fruition. This will only be known through greater attention to all types of waterscapes, furthering the scholastic endeavour this book initiates and celebrates."
- Hannah Pitt, Sustainable Places Research Institute, Cardiff University, Wales UK
"The volume arrives with laudable punctuality an investigative topic of great interest: the relationship between inland waterways and cultural landscapes. A further aspect of particular interest in the volume isrepresented by the cut comparative approach, which, by comparing case studies in several European countries, offers the opportunity to reflect on the relationship between geographical typology (the way of internal water) and its territorial incarnations in different countries and regions, expression of a fruitful argumentative tension between a reading that favors affinities and another complementary perspective that returns instead the differences and uniqueness related to individual places."
- Davide Papotti, Semestrale di studi e ricerche di Geografia
Visentin refers to a ‘watery turn’ (p.246) among the many disciplines that have a bearing on this topic, making it a good time to develop our understanding of the many facets of waterway culture in the past and how it might be explored as heritage in
the present. Although it might not sit squarely within the scope of nautical archaeology, the authors and editors have put together a useful collection that is both intriguing and encouraging.
- ANTONY FIRTH, Tisbury, Wiltshire, UK