AltaMira Press
Pages: 350
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7591-0070-1 • Hardback • September 2003 • $136.00 • (£105.00)
978-0-7591-0071-8 • Paperback • September 2003 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
978-0-7591-1608-5 • eBook • September 2003 • $51.00 • (£39.00)
Thomas F. King has worked in historic preservation since the mid-1960's as an academic, a contractor, and a government official. During 1977-79 he organized historic preservation programs in the islands of Micronesia, and from 1979-88 he oversaw Section 106 review for the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation. He is the author of Cultural Resource Laws and Practice: An Introductory Guide (AltaMira Press, 1998) and Federal Planning and Historic Places: The Section 106 Practice (AltaMira Press,2000) and many other book, articles, and monographs.
Chapter 1: Getting Started With TCPs
Chapter 2: How Did "TCPs" Come Into Our Vernacular?
Chapter 3: TCPs in Broader Perspective: Examples From Far and Wide
Chapter 4: And Closer to Home...
Chapter 5: TCPs in Broader Perspective: Theoretical and Synthesizing Perspectives
Chapter 6: What Makes a TCP?
Chapter 7: Bulletin 38 Revisited: Identifying TCPs
Chapter 8: Bulletin 38 Revisited: Evaluating Eligibility
Chapter 9: Beyond Identification: Managing Effects
Chapter 10: Beyond Bulletin 38: Managing TCPs Themselves
Chapter 11: Consultation
Chapter 12: Some TCP Issues
Chapter 13: A View From The Hill
As a cultural resource manager who has worked and struggled with Traditional Cultural Properties for years, Tom King's new book puts many of my past experiences into perspective and provided new ideas and insights for future practice. Anyone responsible for managing and protecting TCPs will find King's compassionate and pragmatic perspectives to be both interesting and valuable.
— Darby Stapp, Hanford Cultural Resources Laboratory, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Places that Count aims to help members of the heritage preservation community understand and recognize traditional cultural places in all their kaleidoscopic and culturally variegated forms. This volume is an elegant and eloquent presentation of preservation laws and regulations, coupled with King's philosophical ruminations about how they might have been, and might yet be, better used in the interests of everyone concerned with historic preservation of places and the multiplicity of meanings attached thereto. King knows preservation laws and regulations perhaps better than any one in the country, and is keenly aware that, in the end, both are matters of (often contested) interpretation. We would do well, in the interests of heritage preservation in general and traditional cultural places in particular, to listen to and act upon—what he has to tell us.
— Don Fowler; University Of Nevada, Reno