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Heritage, identity and value: Ida's Valley, Stellenbosch

Heritage sites, inclusive of cultural landscapes, are understood to derive their significance from perceptions of beauty, sense of place and, when it has been impacted by humans, its genius loci and tangible qualities and the overlay of their intangible associations. In order for a site to be recogn...

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Main Author: Ontong, Tyrone Gregory
Other Authors: Townsend, Stephen S
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Architecture, Planning and Geomatics 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Ontong, Tyrone Gregory
author2 Townsend, Stephen S
author_browse Ontong, Tyrone Gregory
Townsend, Stephen S
author_facet Townsend, Stephen S
Ontong, Tyrone Gregory
author_sort Ontong, Tyrone Gregory
collection Thesis
description Heritage sites, inclusive of cultural landscapes, are understood to derive their significance from perceptions of beauty, sense of place and, when it has been impacted by humans, its genius loci and tangible qualities and the overlay of their intangible associations. In order for a site to be recognized concurrence of an Authorised Heritage Discourse whose content is constructed by academics and professionally trained heritage experts and an Autochthonous Discourse defined and expressed by laypersons, occupying or having an association with the site or sites. When Ida's Valley Cultural Landscape underwent processes of identification and declaration (formal process) as a National Heritage Site in 2008 the assumption was that there was consensus between the two views, the Authorized Heritage Discourse and the Autochthonous Discourse. The hypothesis, then, in the case of Ida's Valley Cultural Landscape which lies just beyond the limits of the town, Stellenbosch, was that there was agreement between the AHD and the AD. The question that arose was whether the two readings of heritage value aligned and whether there really was agreement in terms of the significance of the site and the values it represented. This is found not to be the case. Concerns were raised regarding the manner in which the public participation process was handled, the content of the statement of significance around issues of identification, identity and, consequently, its impact on the idea of value. In addition, the issues of land for development, the locus of land ownership and the subsequent value and universal acceptance were placed under scrutiny and severely criticized by the local public and community groups. The conclusion was that there was no agreement between the two positions. The dissertation describes the exploration of these tensions.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:45:52.322Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
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publisher School of Architecture, Planning and Geomatics
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/25418 Heritage, identity and value: Ida's Valley, Stellenbosch Ontong, Tyrone Gregory Townsend, Stephen S Conservation of the Built Environment Heritage sites, inclusive of cultural landscapes, are understood to derive their significance from perceptions of beauty, sense of place and, when it has been impacted by humans, its genius loci and tangible qualities and the overlay of their intangible associations. In order for a site to be recognized concurrence of an Authorised Heritage Discourse whose content is constructed by academics and professionally trained heritage experts and an Autochthonous Discourse defined and expressed by laypersons, occupying or having an association with the site or sites. When Ida's Valley Cultural Landscape underwent processes of identification and declaration (formal process) as a National Heritage Site in 2008 the assumption was that there was consensus between the two views, the Authorized Heritage Discourse and the Autochthonous Discourse. The hypothesis, then, in the case of Ida's Valley Cultural Landscape which lies just beyond the limits of the town, Stellenbosch, was that there was agreement between the AHD and the AD. The question that arose was whether the two readings of heritage value aligned and whether there really was agreement in terms of the significance of the site and the values it represented. This is found not to be the case. Concerns were raised regarding the manner in which the public participation process was handled, the content of the statement of significance around issues of identification, identity and, consequently, its impact on the idea of value. In addition, the issues of land for development, the locus of land ownership and the subsequent value and universal acceptance were placed under scrutiny and severely criticized by the local public and community groups. The conclusion was that there was no agreement between the two positions. The dissertation describes the exploration of these tensions. 2017-09-26T14:59:06Z 2017-09-26T14:59:06Z 2017 Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25418 eng application/pdf School of Architecture, Planning and Geomatics Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Conservation of the Built Environment
Ontong, Tyrone Gregory
Heritage, identity and value: Ida's Valley, Stellenbosch
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Heritage, identity and value: Ida's Valley, Stellenbosch
title_full Heritage, identity and value: Ida's Valley, Stellenbosch
title_fullStr Heritage, identity and value: Ida's Valley, Stellenbosch
title_full_unstemmed Heritage, identity and value: Ida's Valley, Stellenbosch
title_short Heritage, identity and value: Ida's Valley, Stellenbosch
title_sort heritage identity and value ida s valley stellenbosch
topic Conservation of the Built Environment
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25418
work_keys_str_mv AT ontongtyronegregory heritageidentityandvalueidasvalleystellenbosch