This book aims to contribute an alternative analysis and representation
of contemporary Greek cultural landscapes. Cultural landscapes,
including Greek ones, are both material and symbolic and as such they
are products of human labour and social representations. The research
identifies and documents the many facets and readings of Greek cultural
landscapes, going beyond dominant touristic and picturesque approaches,
which are exceptionally effective in erasing the social processes that
define landscapes. In doing this, the research uses a novel methodology
for the selection and documentation of 75 landscapes covering most of
Greece. Aerial Photography (high and low oblique) is used for each
particular landscape, in combination with scientific texts, terrestrial
material (historical photos, maps, diagrams) and extracts from Greek
literature.