Negotiating authenticity and biodiversity in heritage gardens

With this paper we explore and discuss the priorities of and possible goal conflicts between authenticity and climate change in heritage gardens. How can climate change mitigation, adaptation, resilience, and cultural heritage conservation be combined in heritage gardens?  Our study was guided by t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Emma Grönlund, Joakim Seiler
Format: Article
Language:Danish
Published: Formakademisk, Oslo 2023-09-01
Series:FORMakademisk
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.oslomet.no/index.php/formakademisk/article/view/5432
_version_ 1797678743178706944
author Emma Grönlund
Joakim Seiler
author_facet Emma Grönlund
Joakim Seiler
author_sort Emma Grönlund
collection DOAJ
description With this paper we explore and discuss the priorities of and possible goal conflicts between authenticity and climate change in heritage gardens. How can climate change mitigation, adaptation, resilience, and cultural heritage conservation be combined in heritage gardens?  Our study was guided by the following research question: How do gardeners negotiate climate change and authenticity in heritage gardens? From Rachel Carson's Silent Spring in the 1960s through to the 2002 report Gardening in the Global Greenhouse and the recent Gardening in a Changing World in 2022 mankind's impact on the environ­ment and the emerging climate change has been the focus of increasing attention. By invest­i­gat­ing and interviewing multiple gardeners our objective was to pinpoint common challenges, as well as what can be learned from one another within the field of gardening and heritage conservation. The case study method was adopted for this study, involving three head gardeners in the United Kingdom. Interviews were conducted with Joseph Atkin at Aberglasney Gardens, Claire Greenslade at Hestercombe Gardens, and Steve Lannin at Iford Manor about their expertise and knowledge. The gardeners expressed concern re­garding climate change and the challenges it poses. The interviewees shared their experience with drought, reduced use of pesticides and herbicides, and the peat legislation in relation to their role as head gardeners. We argue that authenticity and the traditional gardening practised before the advent of power tools, plastic, peat issues, and uninformed transportation can be part of the solution to loss of bio­diversity and climate change. This paper identifies some of the obstacles encountered in relation to negotiating questions of authenticity and climate change in heritage gardens.
first_indexed 2024-03-11T23:04:18Z
format Article
id doaj.art-40ae05abc78e4268a146ddc6de4ca41e
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1890-9515
language Danish
last_indexed 2024-03-11T23:04:18Z
publishDate 2023-09-01
publisher Formakademisk, Oslo
record_format Article
series FORMakademisk
spelling doaj.art-40ae05abc78e4268a146ddc6de4ca41e2023-09-21T13:40:04ZdanFormakademisk, OsloFORMakademisk1890-95152023-09-0116410.7577/formakademisk.5432Negotiating authenticity and biodiversity in heritage gardensEmma Grönlund0Joakim Seiler1University of GothenburgUniversity of Gothenburg With this paper we explore and discuss the priorities of and possible goal conflicts between authenticity and climate change in heritage gardens. How can climate change mitigation, adaptation, resilience, and cultural heritage conservation be combined in heritage gardens?  Our study was guided by the following research question: How do gardeners negotiate climate change and authenticity in heritage gardens? From Rachel Carson's Silent Spring in the 1960s through to the 2002 report Gardening in the Global Greenhouse and the recent Gardening in a Changing World in 2022 mankind's impact on the environ­ment and the emerging climate change has been the focus of increasing attention. By invest­i­gat­ing and interviewing multiple gardeners our objective was to pinpoint common challenges, as well as what can be learned from one another within the field of gardening and heritage conservation. The case study method was adopted for this study, involving three head gardeners in the United Kingdom. Interviews were conducted with Joseph Atkin at Aberglasney Gardens, Claire Greenslade at Hestercombe Gardens, and Steve Lannin at Iford Manor about their expertise and knowledge. The gardeners expressed concern re­garding climate change and the challenges it poses. The interviewees shared their experience with drought, reduced use of pesticides and herbicides, and the peat legislation in relation to their role as head gardeners. We argue that authenticity and the traditional gardening practised before the advent of power tools, plastic, peat issues, and uninformed transportation can be part of the solution to loss of bio­diversity and climate change. This paper identifies some of the obstacles encountered in relation to negotiating questions of authenticity and climate change in heritage gardens. https://journals.oslomet.no/index.php/formakademisk/article/view/5432biodiversityauthenticityclimate changecraftHeritage gardens
spellingShingle Emma Grönlund
Joakim Seiler
Negotiating authenticity and biodiversity in heritage gardens
FORMakademisk
biodiversity
authenticity
climate change
craft
Heritage gardens
title Negotiating authenticity and biodiversity in heritage gardens
title_full Negotiating authenticity and biodiversity in heritage gardens
title_fullStr Negotiating authenticity and biodiversity in heritage gardens
title_full_unstemmed Negotiating authenticity and biodiversity in heritage gardens
title_short Negotiating authenticity and biodiversity in heritage gardens
title_sort negotiating authenticity and biodiversity in heritage gardens
topic biodiversity
authenticity
climate change
craft
Heritage gardens
url https://journals.oslomet.no/index.php/formakademisk/article/view/5432
work_keys_str_mv AT emmagronlund negotiatingauthenticityandbiodiversityinheritagegardens
AT joakimseiler negotiatingauthenticityandbiodiversityinheritagegardens