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Heritage and the Late Modern State I

Mon statut pour la session

Quoi:
Regular session
Quand:
11:00, Samedi 4 Juin 2016 (4 heures)
Thèmes:
Heritage Changes PoliticsHeritage in Conflicts
Mots-clés:
Heritage changes politicsPolitical uses of heritageUses of heritageHeritage and conflicts
This session explores the different ways late modern states control and translate heritage, both their own and that of others. While modern governments have always played a role in the production and authorization of heritage, late modern states have unprecedented command over the heritage landscape. Coinciding with the postwar economic boom, globalization, and most recently neoliberalism, the state has come to dominate the most vital aspects of heritage, ranging from research (heritage production) to education (heritage reproduction) and governance (heritage stewardship). As such, the late modern state (1950-present) constitutes an important framework for exploring contemporary heritage environments. Aspects of the late modern heritage landscape given primacy in this session include state institutions and their bureaucracies (e.g., schools, libraries, museums, biology/natural resource management, archaeology/cultural resource management), and heritage under capitalism, colonialism, imperialism, nationalism, globalization, and neoliberalism. Contributors to this timely session are asked to speak to the following themes, in part or in whole:
• imagined communities,
• heritage in conflict and cooperation,
• critical sustainability perspectives,
• the rise and fall of expert knowledge,
• rethinking heritage policies beyond elite cultural narratives,
• the future of heritage.

Joshua Dent

Modérateur.rice

Sous sessions

11:00 - 11:30 | 30 minutes

American archaeologists in service of the nation state have long denied an ancient presence of Indigenous peoples in the Western Hemisphere. State institutions and their bureaucracies have controlled the reproduction of Indigenous heritage in education and general discussions to mimic an acceptable national social memory of Indigenous peoples as recent immigrants from the east, from Siberia or Asia. Although a few archaeologists argued for an earlier than 12,000 year before present presenc...

Paulette Steeves

Participant.e
11:00 - 11:30 | 30 minutes

Cultural heritage is fundamental to individual and group identity, and is therefore protected, preserved, and otherwise managed through legislation and policy at all levels of government. In the past decade, greater attention has been placed on international codes of standards, practice, and ethics specific to heritage and archaeology, created by organizations such as the World Archaeological Congress, the International Congress on Monuments and Sites, and the United Nations Educational, S...

Erin Hogg

Participant.e
11:00 - 11:30 | 30 minutes

Over the past twenty-five years, numerous amendments and additions to heritage- and human rights-based statutes, regulations, and directives were enacted with the intent of legitimizing and increasing the incorporation of indigenous voices into the national historic preservation program of the United States. Generally speaking, this endeavour has been a successful one, with Native American communities establishing a more meaningful role in heritage management and exercising greater soverei...

Lee Rains Clauss

Participant.e
11:00 - 11:30 | 30 minutes

After the First International Leprosy Conference in Berlin in 1897, many leprosy settlements in Asia were established by colonialists for medical quarantine purposes. Due to prevailing segregation laws, leprosy settlements were built in remote locations or on isolated islands for collective management and control during the colonial and postwar years. Even after the disease was proved to be curable and not contagious in the 1980s, lepers and their physical deformities are still treated as ...

Shu-yi Wang

Participant.e
11:00 - 11:30 | 30 minutes

Few Indigenous Peoples have control over their heritage, despite international recognition that they have “the right to maintain, protect and develop” it in accordance with the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), 2007. In Canada, archaeological heritage falls under provincial jurisdiction. In Ontario, the Ontario Heritage Act (R.S.O. 1990) regulates archaeology and licenced archaeologists are “deputized” legally to care for the archaeological materials ...

Gary Warrick

Participant.e
11:00 - 11:30 | 30 minutes

Canada is not just a patchwork of varying heritage governance delineated by provincial and territorial boundaries, but a maelstrom of contesting and overlapping practices and processes originating from state and non-state actors. Where some contemporary scholarship seeks order out of perceived chaos, this paper will celebrate the diversity of heritage management environments and contends that modernity appears to be trending toward an era of customization and away from uniformity. 

Joshua Dent

Participant.e

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