
Nataliya Bezborodova is a MA student, Modern Languages and Cultural Studies, Ukrainian Folklore program. She works as a Research Assistant of Kule Folklore Center and Bohdan Medwydsky Ukrainian Archive. She came to the University of Alberta from Kyiv, Ukraine. Nataliya is currently working on her thesis about Facebook’s narratives about Maidan, Ukraine. January-June 2014, she had taken part in the international research project, Contemporary Ukraine Research Forum: The Case of Euro-Maidan, http://euromaidan-researchforum.ca/. In Ukraine, she helped organize and coordinate numerous conferences, exchange seminars in Humanities. Nataliya got her previous degree in Linguistics and Translation Studies in Kharkiv Karazin University, Ukraine.
Sessions auxquelles Nataliya Bezborodova participe
9:00
9:00
- 10.00 Patchwork of Cultural Symbols in Ukrainian Anti-Governmental Protest (2013-2014) Based on Facebook Narratives
- Participant.e Nataliya Bezborodova (University of Alberta ) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Activism, Civil Society and Heritage
- Conflict generates new lore, and the Maidan, anti-governmental protest in Ukraine in winter 2013-2014, is no exception. Ukrainian recent digital...
- Paper
Sessions auxquelles Nataliya Bezborodova assiste
12:30
12:30
- Research Development Seminar with Michael Herzfeld
- Inscription req. UQAM, pavillon Hubert-Aquin (A) - A-1875
- 12:30 - 15:30 | 3 heures
- The Research Development Seminars gathers young scholars who will informally present and discuss their research with one of the conference's keynot...
- Workshop
- Registration UQAM, pavillon J.-A. De Sève (DS) - DS Main hall
- 12:30 - 17:30 | 5 heures
17:00
17:00
- Opening Ceremony and Cocktail
- Inscription req. Concordia, Grey Nuns Motherhouse (GN) - Former Chapel
- 17:00 - 19:30 | 2 heures 30 minutes
- Welcome addresses and cocktail, followed by the Concordia Signature Event "The Garden of the Grey Nuns". As the opening ceremony and cocktail...
- Cocktail
9:00
9:00
- Keynote : What does heritage change? Le patrimoine, ça change quoi? (Lucie K. Morisset)
- Inscription req. UQAM, pavillon Judith-Jasmin (J) - Salle Alfred-Laliberté
- 9:00 - 10:00 | 1 heure
- What if we changed our views on heritage? And if heritage has already changed? While, on the global scene, s...
- Keynote with simultaneous translation / Conférence avec traduction simultanée

11:00
11:00
- 14.30 Preserving Heritage Across Time and Place: A Study of German Clubs in America
- Participant.e Larissa Mellor |
- 11:00 - 11:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Changing Places, Changing People? Critical Heritage(s) of Diaspora, Migration and Belonging I
- This paper will explore the preservation of tangible and intangible heritage practices by German Clubs in America. Empirical evidence combines w...
- Paper
- 15.30 Pseudo-Religious Intangible Heritage or Intangible Heritage with Religious Characteristics? Conflicts of Interpretations and Definitions in Two Ethnographic Cases
- Participant.e Dr. Alessandro Testa (University of Vienna) |
- 11:00 - 11:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Religion as Heritage - Heritage as Religion?
- The literature about the relationship between cultural heritage and religion, if not abundant, is indeed fast-growing. In fact, the debate seems...
- Paper
- 13.50 Heritage Ontologies: Understanding Heritage as Future-Making Practices
- Participant.e Rodney Harrison (University College London) |
- 11:00 - 11:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Heritage Futures / Utopian Currents I
- While it is customary to think about heritage as a series of practical fields oriented toward the past, it is perhaps less often the case that w...
- Paper
- 16.00 Worshipping the Past, Heritagizing Religion. How did the (Un)Holy Alliance between Churches and Heritage Come to Be?
- Participant.e Helena Wangefelt Ström (Umeå University) |
- 11:00 - 11:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Religion as Heritage - Heritage as Religion?
- “Why museums are the new churches.” This was the title of an essay on BBC Culture (June, 2015), where the author reflected on how museums and ar...
- Paper
- 12.00 "Home is Everywhere and Nowhere": The Critical Heritage of Migration and Belonging in Contemporary European Museums
- Participant.e Dr Susannah Eckersley (Media, Culture, Heritage, Newcastle University, UK) | Participant.e Prof. Rhiannon Mason |
- 11:00 - 11:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Changing Places, Changing People? Critical Heritage(s) of Diaspora, Migration and Belonging I
- This paper will analyze presentations of and identifications with scales of “home” and belonging in European museums, which address (hi)stories ...
- Paper
- 13.30 Landscape, Emotion and Contested Values: An Autoethnographical Case Study in Migration, Place Attachment and the Spirit of Place
- Participant.e Ms Claire Johnstone (Heriot-Watt University ) |
- 11:00 - 11:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Changing Places, Changing People? Critical Heritage(s) of Diaspora, Migration and Belonging I
- When put into the context of cultural heritage, the idea of the emotional value of a landscape can be defined in ICOMOS’s concept of “Spirit of ...
- Paper
- 11.00 Mixing Memory and Desire: Utopian Currents in Heritage
- Participant.e Ms Elizabeth Stainforth (University of Leeds, History of Art and Cultural Studies, United Kingdom ) |
- 11:00 - 11:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Heritage Futures / Utopian Currents I
- There is a well-established precedent for utopian thinking around cultural heritage, particularly in the institutional context. For example, a n...
- Paper
- 14.00 People, Places, and Stories: Culture, Nature, and Associations
- Participant.e Dr. Shabnam Inanloo Dailoo (Athabasca University - Heritage Resources Management) | Participant.e Dr. Manijeh Mannani (Athabasca University) |
- 11:00 - 11:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Changing Places, Changing People? Critical Heritage(s) of Diaspora, Migration and Belonging I
- Canadian society is diverse, and in it, multiculturalism is well pronounced. Based on the Canadian Multiculturalism Act which recognizes Canadia...
- Paper
- 11.00 On the Divide between Secular Values and Use Values in Heritage Conceptions of Churches
- Participant.e Dr Eva Löfgren (Department of Conservation, University of Gothenburg, Sweden) |
- 11:00 - 11:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Religion as Heritage - Heritage as Religion?
- This paper will address the different meanings of the concept of “use” within heritage conservation discourse and practice, and in particular as...
- Paper
17:00
17:00
- Smoked meat in questions Bistro le Sanguinet - Bistro, étage principal et terrasse
- 17:00 - 18:00 | 1 heure
- This festive event will offer delegates a taste of one of the iconic dishes of Montreal, the smoked meat sandwich, imported by Jewish immigration f...
- Cocktail
18:30
18:30
- Keynote: Is Tangible to Intangible as Formal is to Informal ? (Michael Herzfeld)
- Inscription req. UQAM, pavillon Judith-Jasmin (J) - Salle Alfred-Laliberté
- 18:30 - 20:00 | 1 heure 30 minutes
- Most of what we experience as heritage emerges into conscious recognition through a complex mixture of political and ideological filters, including...
- Keynote with simultaneous translation / Conférence avec traduction simultanée

9:00
9:00
- 10.00 Transformation of the Political-Economic System in Poland and New Values of Built Heritage
- Participant.e Janusz Krawczyk (Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń (Poland).) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Re-Writing History in the Time of Late Capitalism : Uses and Abuses of Built Heritage
- This paper concerns the changes and modifications of Polish built heritage after 1989. For Poland, the year of the fall of the Iron Curtain mark...
- Paper
- 12.00 The Irish Language: Shifting from an Identity Marker to a Part of Cultural Heritage
- Participant.e Bożena Gierek (Jagiellonian University, Kraków) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Heritage and the Late Modern State II
- As Laurajane Smith (2006) noticed, heritage is a cultural and social phenomenon, just like language, which is considered to be one of the essent...
- Paper
- 11.00 Heritage as a Symbol of Ideology in a Polarized Society: Constructing Bursa City Identity on the Ottoman Past
- Participant.e Emek Yilmaz (Kangwon National University) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Heritage and the Late Modern State II
- A speedy and laborious work on constructing city identity based on the Ottoman past as “The birth of the Ottoman Empire” (as listed in UNESCO WH...
- Paper
- 10.00 The "War to End War": Utopian Dreams and Lost Opportunities of First World War Heritage
- Participant.e Professor David Harvey (University of Exeter, UK) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Heritage Futures / Utopian Currents II
- In his socialist science-fiction novel, “News From Nowhere,” William Morris expresses a utopian dream of “radical nostalgia.” Heritage is deploy...
- Paper
- 09.30 Pilgrimage in a Contested Sacred Landscape: A Case Study in Conflict between Culture, Heritage Management, and Development in Native North America
- Participant.e Dr Kathleen Van Vlack (Living Heritage Anthropology) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Reshuffling of Knowledge and the Making of Autochthonous Cultural Heritage : Ethnographical Perspectives II | Mise en patrimoine et recomposition de régimes de savoir. Ethnographies d’expériences autochtones II
- In many societies around the world, religious specialists engage in the act of pilgrimage. While on pilgrimage, specialists travel on long-estab...
- Paper
- 10.00 "Dealing with the Past" in Northern Ireland: Empathy as Political Engagement in the Memorial Heritage Project
- Participant.e Prof Elizabeth Crooke (Ulster University) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Empathy and Indifference – Emotional/Affective Routes To and Away from Compassion I
- Now in a transitional phase between violence and established peace, Northern Ireland is dealing with the legacy of forty years of conflict. Memo...
- Paper
- 11.00 Living in a Historic House: Meeting the "Other" through Heritage
- Participant.e Dr Banu Pekol (Ozyegin University, Faculty of Architecture and Design) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Changing Places, Changing People? Critical Heritage(s) of Diaspora, Migration and Belonging II
- This paper will deal with how the residential urban heritage of religious minorities in Istanbul is being re-used and modified—while at the same...
- Paper
- 11.00 Experiencing Mixed Emotions in the Museum: Empathy and Memory in Visitors’ Responses to Histories of Migration
- Participant.e Prof. Rhiannon Mason |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Empathy and Indifference – Emotional/Affective Routes To and Away from Compassion I
- Research involving display analysis and interviews with staff and visitors has shown empathy to be an important feature of interpretative strate...
- Paper
- 09.30 The Red Parentheses: Museums, Memory and the Making of [New] Nations After the Fall of the Iron Curtain
- Participant.e Johan Hegardt (Södertörn University) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Heritage and the Late Modern State II
- The Social Democratic party was the leading political party in Sweden for more than sixty years and its politics have shaped the fundaments of S...
- Paper
- 09.40 Archival Systems: From "Weapons of Affect" to Tools of Compassion
- Participant.e Joanne Evans (Monash University) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Empathy and Indifference – Emotional/Affective Routes To and Away from Compassion I
- At recent Australian Society of Archivists (ASA) and Archives and Records Association of New Zealand (ARANZ) conferences, powerful presentations...
- Paper
- 09.00 Heritage Beyond Borders: Australian Approaches to External Built Heritage
- Participant.e Dr Amy Clarke (University of the Sunshine Coast) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Heritage and the Late Modern State II
- The rights of the state to assess and protect built heritage within its borders, to ratify international conventions, and to cooperate in bilate...
- Paper
- 10.00 Digital vs Tangible: How Museum Visitors Experience Participation and What It Means to Them
- Participant.e Rachael Coghlan (Australian National University) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Envisioning the Dialogic Museum through Digital Interventions
- The rise of web 2.0 (including social media) motivated the museum sector’s embrace of participation, including highly interactive, co-curated ex...
- Paper
- 11.40 Utter (In)Difference: On the Use of Temporality in Tourism
- Participant.e Dr Anna Källén (Stockholm University) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Empathy and Indifference – Emotional/Affective Routes To and Away from Compassion I
- Temporality is a key figure in contemporary tourism. Phrases and images such as “where time has stood still” or “past pristine landscapes” are c...
- Paper
- 09.00 Empathy as a Register of Engagement in Heritage Making: The Making and Withholding of Compassion
- Participant.e Prof. Laurajane Smith (Australian National University) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Empathy and Indifference – Emotional/Affective Routes To and Away from Compassion I
- This paper explores the role that empathy, as both a skill and an emotion, plays in the processes of politicized and self-conscious heritage-mak...
- Paper
14:00
14:00
- Keynote: Renaming, Removal, Recontextualization of Heritage: Purging History, Claiming the Present, Imagining the Future? (What Change-Role for Heritage Professionals?) (James Count Early)
- Inscription req. Musée des Beaux-Ars de Montréal - Cummings Auditorium
- 14:00 - 15:30 | 1 heure 30 minutes
- "What does heritage change?" is a multifaceted question to which the answer(s) are in primary respects related to real-life negotiations among dif...
- Keynote with simultaneous translation / Conférence avec traduction simultanée

7:30
7:30
- 11.30 The Heritagization of Religion: Heritagization Processes in Swedish Policies on the Built Heritage of the Church of Sweden since 1920
- Participant.e Tobias Harding (University of Jyväskylä) |
- 7:30 - 8:00 | 30 minutes Partie de: Beyond Re-uses: The Future of Church Monuments in a Secular Society | Au-delà de la conversion: l'avenir des églises monumentales dans une société sécularisée
- Cultural heritage has been defined as “culture named and projected into the past, and simultaneously, the past congealed into culture.” This is ...
- Paper
9:00
9:00
- 09.00 Ethnoheritage: Heritage Theory from the American Anthropological Perspective
- Participant.e Prof. Kathryn Lafrenz Samuels (University of Maryland, Department of Anthropology, United States) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Critical Heritage Theory: Foundational Cores and Innovative Edges
- The discipline of anthropology has been home to some of the most productive elaborations of cultural heritage research in the United States. In ...
- Paper
- 11.00 “The Places My Granddad Built”: Using Genealogy as a Pedagogical Segue for Heritage Preservation
- Participant.e Dr. Barry L. Stiefel (College of Charleston) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Current Research III
- While teaching heritage preservation courses for several years I struggled with how to give an equal balance to the research and preservation of...
- Paper
- 14.30 The Role of the Critical Heritage Theorist
- Participant.e Prof. Melissa F. Baird (Michigan Technological University, Department of Social Sciences, United States) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Critical Heritage Theory: Foundational Cores and Innovative Edges
- What is the role of the critical heritage theorist? While scholars define and debate the contours of critical heritage theory, the role of the c...
- Paper
- 12.00 Muslims at the "Doors of Christendom": The Refugee Crisis and the Heritage of East-West Contact
- Participant.e Sandra Scham (Catholic University) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Critical Heritage Theory: Foundational Cores and Innovative Edges
- A journalist at a dinner I attended some years ago described the prospect of Turkey being admitted to member status in the European Union as bri...
- Paper
- 09.45 Experiencing a Maori Touring Exhibition in Paris and Québec City: Heritage as Window on the Other and Mirror on Oneself
- Participant.e Dr Mélanie Roustan (Museum national d'Histoire naturelle) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Reflecting on the Mobile Contact Zone: Cultural Diplomacy, Touring Exhibitions and Intercultural Heritage Experiences
- The history of the Maoris' cultural appropriation of museums has been documented, but the effects of the reception of Maori touring exhibitions ...
- Paper
- 13.30 Globalization, Migration and the Heritage of Cross-Cultural People
- Participant.e Laia Colomer (Linnaeus University (Sweden)) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Are Contemporary Processes of Migration Changing the Authorised Heritage Discourse?
- Modern tradition conceptualizes spaces and territories as equivalent to state-nations and consequently frames cultural heritage in national heri...
- Paper
- 11.30 Performing Imaginary Healings: The Post-Conflict Heritage of Ebrington Barracks in Derry-Londonderry
- Participant.e Dr Tom Maguire (Ulster University) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Contested Pasts: Urban Heritage in Divided Cities
- The crucible of the violent conflict in Northern Ireland in the latter part of the twentieth century is known euphemistically as “The Troubles.”...
- Paper
- 09.00 "Like Satires of Creation, We Move North, Gazing at Europe and Brazing the Dazzling Sahara Sun": Diasporic Imagination and Heritage in the Era of Mass Migration
- Participant.e Dr Anna Catalani (University of Lincoln) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Are Contemporary Processes of Migration Changing the Authorised Heritage Discourse?
- This paper will consider how the notions and definitions of heritage (both tangible and intangible) are changing, due to the recent and on-going...
- Paper
- 11.00 Commemorating Conflict or Moving on to a New Era? Dealing with the "Scars in the Urban Fabric“ in Post-Conflict Belfast
- Participant.e Henriette Bertram (University of Kassel) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Contested Pasts: Urban Heritage in Divided Cities
- During political conflict, cities become “intensive microcosms for the wider societal tensions and fragmentations, and their diverse related dis...
- Paper
- 14.00 The Museum of Immigration and Diversity at 19 Princelet Street in Spitalfields: Multi-Vocality in the Interpretation of the Migration Experience and Heritage
- Participant.e Andrea Delaplace (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Are Contemporary Processes of Migration Changing the Authorised Heritage Discourse?
- Migration is no longer, in the phrase coined by French historian Gérard Noiriel, a “non lieu de mémoire.” Public sites increasingly harbour the ...
- Paper
- 09.30 In Public Displays We Trust: Universal Museums and Immigrants
- Participant.e Andreas Pantazatos (Durham University) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Are Contemporary Processes of Migration Changing the Authorised Heritage Discourse?
- Universal museums claim to be custodians of cultural heritage for the benefit of humanity and they thus have an obligation to address the voices...
- Paper
- 14.30 The Mutuality of Colonial Heritage in Multiethnic Paramaribo: Reality or Illusion?
- Participant.e Dr. Eugenio Van Maanen (NHTV Breda University of Applied Sciences, The Netherlands) | Participant.e Gregory Ashworth |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Contested Pasts: Urban Heritage in Divided Cities
- Over the last decade the term “mutual heritage” is increasingly used in policy documents in the Netherlands to describe and contextualize Dutch ...
- Paper
- 09.15 Museum Practices, Indigenous Politics and Cultural Identities on Tour: A Comparative Study of a Māori Exhibition in France, Mexico and Canada
- Participant.e Dr Lee Davidson (Victoria University of Wtgn) | Participant.e Gaëlle Crenn (Université de Lorraine) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Reflecting on the Mobile Contact Zone: Cultural Diplomacy, Touring Exhibitions and Intercultural Heritage Experiences
- Key motivations for touring exhibitions from major museums include enhancing international reputations, sharing expertise, and strengthening ins...
- Paper
- 11.00 Intercultural Practices and Collaboration in an International Touring Exhibition: Professional Perspectives on Aztecs from New Zealand, Australia and Mexico
- Participant.e Leticia Pérez Castellanos (Escuela Nacional de Conservación, Restauración y Museografía) | Participant.e Dr Lee Davidson (Victoria University of Wtgn) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Reflecting on the Mobile Contact Zone: Cultural Diplomacy, Touring Exhibitions and Intercultural Heritage Experiences
- In the museum and cultural world, and also from the point of view of cultural diplomacy, international touring exhibitions have been taken for g...
- Paper
- 11.00 Mapping Intangible Cultural Heritage
- Participant.e Francesca Cominelli (IREST Paris 1) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Critical Heritage Theory: Foundational Cores and Innovative Edges
- The Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage, adopted by the General Conference of the United Nations Educational, Sc...
- Paper
12:30
12:30
- Small (ERA Architects Inc.)
- Inscription req. Concordia, John Molson School of Business Building (MB) - MB 2.445
- 12:30 - 13:30 | 1 heure
- As Canada shifts from a resource-based economy to a knowledge-based economy, small communities that were established to service the primary sect...
- Talk
18:00
18:00
- Film Series Celebration : Sugar Shack Event
- Inscription req. Concordia, LB Building - LB 123
- 18:00 - 19:00 | 1 heure
- To celebrate our film series dedicated to heritage, sponsored by the Department of American Studies at the University of Maryland and the United St...
- Cocktail
9:00
9:00
- 10.00 The Role of Co-Production in Addressing Difficult Pasts and Futures
- Participant.e Dr Bryony Onciul (Univerisity of Exeter) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Co-Production in Heritage: Towards New Imaginaries. Part II. Co-Production, Conservation and Memory; Co-Production and the Professional Imaginary
- This paper will set out to understand what heritage changes and will ask “can heritage affect reality”? It will explore the way heritage and col...
- Paper
- 11.00 Choosing Histories: Agency and Motive in the Representation of Cultural Heritage
- Participant.e John Mullen (Edinburgh, Scotland) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Representing Intangible Heritage of Post-Industrial Waterfront Zones: Politics of Seeing, Ways of Noticing
- This paper examines various uses of representations of heritage as tools for transforming post-industrial waterfront areas of Scotland and Polan...
- Paper
- 11.30 The Heritage of Solidarity
- Participant.e Roman Sebastyanski (University of the West of Scotland) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Representing Intangible Heritage of Post-Industrial Waterfront Zones: Politics of Seeing, Ways of Noticing
- In 1996 the Gdansk Shipyard—a place associated with 150 years of shipbuilding as well as the birthplace of the Solidarity movement—went bankrupt...
- Paper
- 11.00 Genealogy, Archives and Uses of the Past
- Participant.e Dr Carolina Jonsson Malm (Linnaeus University) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Current Research IV
- For centuries, genealogy has been a model for historical investigation, associated with antiquarianism and dynastic models. It is a practice lon...
- Paper
- 11.40 Immediate Emotion: Articulating Historical Consciousness and Heritage in Oral Histories
- Participant.e Ms Jessica Douthwaite (University of Strathclyde) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Empathy and Indifference – Emotional/Affective Routes To and Away from Compassion II
- In this paper I will address ACHS Conference questions surrounding the building of “critical innovations” in heritage and how heritage offers us...
- Paper
- 09.30 Cultural Heritage as a Plural and Dynamic Concept between Europe and Asia
- Participant.e Dr. Marilena Vecco (EUR) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Challenging a Discourse of Difference: Heritage in Asia and Europe
- The notion of cultural heritage is predominantly a European-based concept as it can be perceived through a scan of the literature and the intern...
- Paper
- 14.00 Heritage and the Creation of Rural Identity in Alberta, Canada
- Participant.e Dr Lianne McTavish (University of Alberta ) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: “For People Then and for People Now”: Approaches to Heritage and Shared Authority
- The Torrington Gopher Hole Museum offers a case study for analyzing how heritage was invented both to engage diverse stakeholders and reshape th...
- Paper
- 09.20 Is the Artist an Unreliable Heritage Archivist?
- Participant.e Clara Gutsche (Concordia University) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: What does Photography Preserve? Reification and Ruin in the Photographic Heritage of a Place Called Montreal
- This presentation will include images from the Milton Park series (1970-1973) by David Miller and myself, and excerpts from my recent work (2008...
- Paper
- 10.00 Challenging the Hegemony of European Holocaust Memory: A Study of Different Approaches to Representing Difficult Heritage in Europe, Asia and North America
- Participant.e Sandra Sulamith Graefenstein (ANU) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Challenging a Discourse of Difference: Heritage in Asia and Europe
- Over the past two and a half decades, a new type of museum dedicated to representing violent pasts through the lens of human rights has emerged ...
- Paper
- 11.20 Heritage, Emotional Communities, and Imaginary Childhood Landscapes
- Participant.e Christian Widholm (Södertörn University) |
- 9:00 - 9:30 | 30 minutes Partie de: Empathy and Indifference – Emotional/Affective Routes To and Away from Compassion II
- Employing examples from maritime heritage attractions in Sweden this paper aims to analyze how heritage stakeholders situate their enterprises t...
- Paper
13:30
13:30
- 14.30 Owning Jerusalem's Past: UNESCO World Heritage and the Struggle for Symbolic Recognition
- Participant.e Benedetta Serapioni ((IEG) Leibniz Institute of European History (Mainz)) |
- 13:30 - 14:00 | 30 minutes Partie de: Rights-Based Approaches to Heritage Management: Possibilities and Limitations
- The aim of this paper is to reflect, from an historical perspective, on the ways the 1972 UNESCO World Heritage Convention opened a new space to...
- Paper
- 14.15 Brussels’ Churches: Paradoxical Uses in an International Metropolis
- Participant.e Prof. Thomas Coomans (KU Leuven, Raymond Lemaire International Centre for Conservation) |
- 13:30 - 14:00 | 30 minutes Partie de: Heritage and the New Fate of Sacred Places | Le patrimoine et le destin des lieux sacrés
- The World Migration Report 2015 revealed that 62% of Brussels’ population is not born in Belgium. Brussels, therefore, is the second migration c...
- Paper
- Heritage and the New Fate of Sacred Places | Le patrimoine et le destin des lieux sacrés
- Inscription req. Oratoire Saint-Joseph du Mont-Royal (St. Joseph Oratory) - Salle Raoul-Gauthier
- 13:30 - 17:00 | 3 heures 30 minutes
- While historical churches are being abandoned all over the Christian West, more and more places are growing the opposite way: pilgrimage sites are ...
- Regular session
- 13.45 Religion-to-Religion Adaptive Reuse: Retaining Sacred Use and Re-conceptualizing Built Heritage in Canada
- Participant.e Candace Iron (Humber College) |
- 13:30 - 14:00 | 30 minutes Partie de: Heritage and the New Fate of Sacred Places | Le patrimoine et le destin des lieux sacrés
- Historically, Canada’s cultural and religious heritage has been associated with Christianity. Contemporary Canada is, however, multicultural and...
- Paper
- 14.30 Heritagization of the Leisure Activity Dance: Does it Matter?
- Participant.e Siri Mæland (NTNU, Norwegian University of Science and Technology /UBP, Université Blaise Pascal.) |
- 13:30 - 14:00 | 30 minutes Partie de: Leisure as Heritage: Reconceptualizing Heritage and Leisure
- This paper will explore the continuity and the changes of the lived experience of traditional and social dancing in a rural community in Norway....
- Paper
- 16.00 Religious Leisure, Heritage and Identity Construction of Tibetan College Students
- Participant.e Prof. Huimei Liu (Zhejiang University, Institute of Cross-cultural and Regional Studies; Asian Pacific Centre for the Education and Study of Leisure) |
- 13:30 - 14:00 | 30 minutes Partie de: Leisure as Heritage: Reconceptualizing Heritage and Leisure
- Leisure has been primarily viewed as “a measure of time, as a container of activity, and in terms of meaning,” either independently or in combin...
- Paper
15:30
15:30
- Museums and Historical Consciousness: Emergent Themes in Theory and Practice Concordia, John Molson School of Business Building (MB) - MB S1.115
- 15:30 - 17:00 | 1 heure 30 minutes
- To date, very little literature explicitly explores the relationships of museums and heritage to historical consciousness, despite the overlappi...
- Roundtable
8:30
8:30
- Post-Conference Tour: À la découverte de Kahnawà :ke | Discovery of Kahnawà :ke
- Inscription req. UQAM, pavillon J.-A. De Sève (DS) - DS Registration table (meeting point)
- 8:30 - 17:30 | 9 heures
- ||| Les Mohawks constituent la nation amérindienne la plus nombreuse parmi les dix différentes nations que compte le Québec. La nation mohawk...
- Tour