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This paper explores the mode of production and potential uses of a specific heritage fieldwork and interpretation tool: collaborative experiential maps. Drawing from a case study in Italy, this paper asks to what extent the experiential map created with the sole input from members of the local community can offer a useful research tool in fieldwork and interpretation — specifically, it discusses how open-ended, collaborative experiential mapping can add to the traditional quantitative ‘distribution map’ commonly used by heritage professionals, landscape archaeologists and historians. This hands-on way of map-making offers a cartographic and visual output to better communicate the complex nature of local heritage, as it situates and blends places, folk-tales, material culture and memories in one straight-forward, colourful and approachable medium.
Sarah De Nardi (Sat,) studied this question.
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