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The past in scene: retrieving memory in places of memory
Ref.: 299
Área temática:
03 Integridad visual de los paisajes urbanos históricos
Fecha de recepción:
15/11/2008
AUTORES (* Autor principal)
LOPES, Maria Conceição
* (Portugal)
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University of Coimbra
FERREIRA MACÍAS, Santiago Augustro
(Portugal)
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Campo Arqueológico de Metorla
ABSTRACT
The visual integrity of urban historic landscapes that are, by nature, spaces of exhibition and experience of collective memory and cultural
identity, is structured on the dialog that contemporaneity undertakes with the diversity and variety of heritage constructed expressions that,
by juxtaposition or interpenetration, are responsible for past experiences. Archaeology, by proposing itself to study the dynamic of past
societies, fundamentally from hidden elements, builds on and enriches that dialog with the sediments of the processes of transmission,
transformation and construction of collective memory and cultural identity that are indispensable to the integrity and consolidation of the
scenario. Archaeology, in its specialization of Urban Archaeology, by retrieving and giving visibility to a long term and hybrid nature
heritage, brings to the debate the latency potential that facts gone with time still keep and that, due to a wide array of reasons, and by one
mean or another, societies and communities revive, even if reinterpreted, as a participation subject and factor of integrity and
cohesion. In the contemporary debate between the constructed past and the present in construction, into which the multiple heritage
expressions are summoned, the ways in which Archaeology puts the past in scene are invoked, giving identity and legitimacy to the urban
historical landscapes. Some historical cities of small dimensions from the inner South of Portugal, Moura, Beja, Serpa, are presented
as examples of how Archaeology can determine a process of continuous construction by discovering the facts again and provide to the
communities of the present ways to remember the past and renovate the fundamental principles for the construction of its identity and
collective memory.
BIBLIOGRAFÍA
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