Despite the vast research on landscape and landscape archaeology conducted over the past decade little attention has been given to the role of memory and imagination in people's engagement with their ancestral homelands, "country" or other meaningful landscape. An analysis of a range of case studies, both historical and contemporary reveal that people often feel great attachment to and desire to engage with lands that they may have never visited or have little empirical evidence for attachment. Further complicating this are those examples where a "heritage" landscape based on ancient homelands is constructed on the diasporic lands of their daily lives. Understanding these imaginary landscapes offers the opportunity to take a fresh look at the relationship between identity and landscape. © 2012 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.
CITATION STYLE
Russell, L. (2012). Remembering places never visited: Connections and context in imagined and imaginary landscapes. International Journal of Historical Archaeology, 16(2), 401–417. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10761-012-0182-1
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