🎉 Up to 70% Off Selected ItemsShop Sale
HomeStore

On Conservation as a Human Science

Product image 1

On Conservation as a Human Science

Conservators as first responders in a world where our cultural heritage is increasingly at risk

Conservation can be understood as a form of knowing; conservators extract meaning about the past from what remains, while noting what is missing and sometimes repairing it. In this erudite and virtuosic book, the historian Peter N. Miller imagines the outlines of a new, expansive notion of conservation that links the world around us—natural and man-made—to the world inside us—our genome, our memories. Putting the work of conservation into conversation with history, philosophy, and literature yields a shift in perspective. It raises questions central to the work of the humanities: What does time mean? How do we write about knowledge? How does care connect humans not just with the world but also with each other? And where does freedom exist in a world of things?

Miller casts conservators as first responders in a world as fragile as the things they work on. He argues that a broader conception of conservation can provide the necessary intellectual resources for grappling with the scale of the enormous challenges ahead. Offering a kind of sketch of a curriculum for that future, Miller suggests that shaping the person of the conservator is as important as shaping the field. For only those trained to think about change through the painstaking labor of preserving and restoring will be able to do the work of policy and advocacy required by our uncertain future.



Conservators as first responders in a world where our cultural heritage is increasingly at risk

Conservation can be understood as a form of knowing; conservators extract meaning about the past from what remains, while noting what is missing and sometimes repairing it. In this erudite and virtuosic book, the historian Peter N. Miller imagines the outlines of a new, expansive notion of conservation that links the world around us—natural and man-made—to the world inside us—our genome, our memories. Putting the work of conservation into conversation with history, philosophy, and literature yields a shift in perspective. It raises questions central to the work of the humanities: What does time mean? How do we write about knowledge? How does care connect humans not just with the world but also with each other? And where does freedom exist in a world of things?

Miller casts conservators as first responders in a world as fragile as the things they work on. He argues that a broader conception of conservation can provide the necessary intellectual resources for grappling with the scale of the enormous challenges ahead. Offering a kind of sketch of a curriculum for that future, Miller suggests that shaping the person of the conservator is as important as shaping the field. For only those trained to think about change through the painstaking labor of preserving and restoring will be able to do the work of policy and advocacy required by our uncertain future.



$20.68

Original: $59.08

-65%
On Conservation as a Human Science—

$59.08

$20.68

Description

Conservators as first responders in a world where our cultural heritage is increasingly at risk

Conservation can be understood as a form of knowing; conservators extract meaning about the past from what remains, while noting what is missing and sometimes repairing it. In this erudite and virtuosic book, the historian Peter N. Miller imagines the outlines of a new, expansive notion of conservation that links the world around us—natural and man-made—to the world inside us—our genome, our memories. Putting the work of conservation into conversation with history, philosophy, and literature yields a shift in perspective. It raises questions central to the work of the humanities: What does time mean? How do we write about knowledge? How does care connect humans not just with the world but also with each other? And where does freedom exist in a world of things?

Miller casts conservators as first responders in a world as fragile as the things they work on. He argues that a broader conception of conservation can provide the necessary intellectual resources for grappling with the scale of the enormous challenges ahead. Offering a kind of sketch of a curriculum for that future, Miller suggests that shaping the person of the conservator is as important as shaping the field. For only those trained to think about change through the painstaking labor of preserving and restoring will be able to do the work of policy and advocacy required by our uncertain future.



You may also like

-65%NEW

Kawalerowie - Palcie Tylko Sporty

$26.85

$9.40

-65%NEW

Anton Barbeau - An Introduction To Anton Barbeau (Cd)

$14.76

$5.17

-65%NEW

`Norcos Y Horchata - Unkind Sometimes/Don`T Come Crying To Me (7`` Single)`

$25.50

$8.92

-65%NEW

`Killer Kin - Point Blank/Mr. Dynamite (7`` Single)`

$30.87

$10.80

-65%NEW

`Dave Swanson`S Mystery Airship - Nothing To Lose (7`` Single) (Coloured Vinyl)`

$16.10

$5.63

-65%NEW

`Don Howland & Cheater Slicks - Endgame/Poor Me (7`` Single)`

$14.76

$5.17

-65%NEW

Mount Atlas - Titan

$87.28

$30.55

-65%NEW

Hotwax & Wytch Pycknyck - The Piper 7 Singles Club

$45.65

$15.98

NEW

Welch Marvin & Farrar - Lady Of The Morning (Live Recordings 1971-1972)

$34.90

NEW

`Dave Swanson`S Mystery Airship - Nothing To Lose (7`` Single)`

$14.76

NEW

`Hellacopters - 1995 (7`` Single) (Coloured Vinyl)`

$16.10

NEW

`Covids & Nestter Donuts - Banned From The Usa (7`` Single)`

$14.76