The Valtellina and UNESCO

Making a Global Landscape

By (author) Thomas J. Puleo

Hardback - £88.00

Publication date:

14 September 2012

Length of book:

198 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

ISBN-13: 9780739173466

Global in scope and transdisciplinary in method, this work examines the process through which local historic landscapes become global heritage sites. The Valtellina, a valley in the Italian Alps, is known for being unusually fertile for its elevation and latitude, and for the dry stone terraces on its steep hillsides that make this fertility possible. ProVinea, a local nonprofit, has applied to UNESCO to inscribe these landscapes onto its World Heritage list, representing the construction and use of the terraces as the heroic transformation of barren slopes into fertile fields. Drawing on Michel Serres’ theory of serial parasitism, this study demonstrates how ProVinea discursively and materially remakes the landscapes by culling the advantageous, eliminating the detrimental, and assembling the dispersed. A casualty of this process is a more complex and complete truth, one that this book aims to restore, while also acknowledging the validity of World Heritage’s efforts to build a global culture and ProVinea’s desire to connect to it.
The ‘heroic’ Valtellina of extreme northern Italy where Teuton and Latin, Protestant and Catholic, wood and stone meet and divide is brought alive in this scintillating story of how a proposed World Heritage landscape famous for its terraced agriculture is best understood as serving purposes well beyond those of the local agricultural production typically emphasized.