Teaching Landscape History

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Teaching Landscape History Editors: Robert Holden, David Jacques, Jan Woudstra Format: Hardback First Published: Published By: Taylor & Francis Ltd
string(3) "236"
Pages: 236 Illustrations and other contents: 1 Tables, black and white; 4 Line drawings, black and white; 60 Halftones, black and white; 64 Illustrations, black and white Language: English ISBN: 9781032398495 Categories: ,

This would be the only publication on this topic at a time when all teachers of landscape and garden history are conscious of the need to reconsider their offer. The book will be co-produced by an international community of history teachers in aspects of landscape design and is intended to become a standard reference in the field.

Weight0.474552 kg
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This publication is an important contribution to a global movement of scholarly reflection on how reframing landscape history could unlock new possibilities in teaching and learning about our shared global environmental legacy. Kofi Boone, Distinguished Professor and University Faculty Scholar, NC State University, USA Profound knowledge of landscape history is indispensable for landscape architects. It provides valuable insights into the historical layering and narrative of a place which will inspire users, enlarge societal acceptance and prevents a design which denies the genius loci. This book is an excellent aid for this. Theo Spek, Professor of Landscape History, University of Groningen, The Netherlands Knowing landscape history is fundamental in understanding how the environment has been used, designed and transformed by human society. By bringing together a range of interdisciplinary and transnational understandings in teaching landscape history, this volume challenges historical and shifting perspectives of landscape in relation to race, class, gender, and politics. Catharina Nolin, Professor of Art History, Department of Culture and Aesthetics, Stockholm University, Sweden

Author Biography

Jan Woudstra trained in landscape architecture and horticulture in the Netherlands and at Kew and completed an MA at the Institute of Advanced Architectural Studies at the University of York. His PhD in the Department of Geography at the University of London looked at modernism in twentieth-century landscape design. While working in private practice, he taught on the part-time landscape conservation course at the Architectural Association. He joined the Department of Landscape at the University of Sheffield in 1995, where he is Reader in Landscape History and Theory. He writes extensively and his publications include Jan Woudstra and Camilla Allen (eds.), The Politics of Street Trees (2022); Jonathan Finch and Jan Woudstra (eds.), Capability Brown, Royal Gardener: The Business of Place-Making in Northern Europe (2020); Jan Woudstra and Colin Roth (eds.), A History of Groves (2018). David Jacques is an historian and conservationist of parks and gardens, and has been a prominent advocate of cultural landscapes. He lectured on the MA in Conservation Studies at the Institute of Advanced Architectural Studies at York, the Landscape Conservation MA at the Architectural Association and the Garden History MA at the Institute of Historical Research at the University of London, and was Visiting Professor at De Montfort University 1999-2002. He was the Inspector of Parks and Gardens at English Heritage 1987-93, and at other times was a consultant, for example, on the Privy Garden at Hampton Court. His publications include Georgian Gardens: The Reign of Nature (1983), The Gardens of William and Mary (1988), Landscape Modernism Renounced: The Career of Christopher Tunnard (1910-1979) (with Jan Woudstra) (2009), Gardens of Court and Country (2017), Landscape Appreciation: Theories since the Cultural Turn (2019) and Chiswick House Gardens: 300 Years of Creation and Recreation (2022). Robert Holden is a British landscape architect educated at the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne. His career has been half in practice, and he was known for work on European business parks in the 1980s and 1990s, and half in academia, where he was a lecturer at the University of Greenwich 1992 until 2013. In 1972-82 he was on the Committee of the (UK) Garden History Society. In the 2000s he was Education Chair, then Secretary General of EFLA (now IFLA Europe). He has contributed widely to the technical press. For FOLAR he organises an annual Symposium aiming to assist the Landscape Institute prior to its centenary in 2029.