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El. knyga: Safeguarding Intangible Heritage: Practices and Politics

Edited by (University of Queensland, Australia), Edited by (Australian National University)
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The UNESCO Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage came into force in 2006, framing the international and national practices and policies associated with intangible cultural heritage. This volume critically and reflexively examines these practices and policies, providing an accessible account of the different ways in which intangible cultural heritage has been defined and managed in both national and international contexts. As Safeguarding Intangible Heritage reveals, the concept and practices of safeguarding are complicated and often contested, and there is a need for international debate about the meaning, nature and value of heritage and what it means to ‘safeguard’ it. Safeguarding Intangible Heritage presents a significant cross section of ideas and practices from some of the key academics and practitioners working in the area, whose areas of expertise span anthropology, law, heritage studies, linguistics, archaeology, museum studies, folklore, architecture, Indigenous studies and history. The chapters in this volume give an overarching analysis of international policy and practice and critically frame case studies that analyze practices from a range of countries, including Australia, Canada, China, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Kyrgyzstan, New Zealand, Taiwan, the UK and Zimbabwe.With a focus on conceptual and theoretical issues, this follow-up to Intangible Heritage, by the same editors, will be of great interest to students, scholars and professionals working in the fields of heritage and museum studies, heritage conservation, heritage tourism, global history, international relations, art and architectural history, and linguists.
List of figures
vii
List of contributors
viii
Series editors' foreword xiii
1 The practices and politics of safeguarding
1(14)
Natsuko Akagawa
Laurajane Smith
PART I Legal, administrative and conceptual challenges
15(118)
2 Further reflections on community involvement in safeguarding intangible cultural heritage
17(19)
Janet Blake
3 Intangible heritage safeguarding and intellectual property protection in the context of implementing the UNESCO ICH Convention
36(18)
Harriet Deacon
Rieks Smeets
4 Intangible heritage economics and the law: Listing, com modification and market alienation
54(14)
Lucas Lixinski
5 Inside the UNESCO apparatus: from intangible representations to tangible effects
68(16)
Kristin Kuutma
6 Intangibility re-translated
84(18)
Min-Chin Chiang
7 Language as world heritage? Critical perspectives on language-as-archive
102(16)
Ana Deumert
Anne Storch
8 The Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage: absentees, objections and assertions
118(15)
Mairead Nic Craith
Ullrich Kockel
Katherine Lloyd
PART II The complexities of `safeguarding'
133(117)
9 Batik as a creative industry: political, social and economic use of intangible heritage
135(20)
Natsuko Akagawa
10 Replacing faith in spirits with faith in heritage: a story of the management of the Gangneung Danoje Festival
155(19)
Cedarbough T. Saeji
11 World Heritage communities, anchors and values for the safeguarding of intangible cultural heritage in southern Africa: Botswana and Zimbabwe
174(13)
Stella Basinyi
Munyaradzi Elton Sagiya
12 ICH-isation of popular religions and the politics of recognition in China
187(13)
Ming-Chun Ku
13 National identity, culinary heritage and UNESCO: Japanese washoku
200(18)
Natsuko Akagawa
14 Beyond safeguarding measures, or a tale of strange bedfellows: improvisation as heritage
218(14)
Mustafa Coskun
15 Playing with intangible heritage: video game technology and procedural re-enactment
232(18)
Jakub Majewski
Index 250
Natsuko Akagawa has a PhD and Masters in Cultural Heritage and Museum Studies, a Masters in Business Administration, a Graduate Diploma of Education, and a Diploma of Portuguese Language and Culture. Currently Lecturer at The University of Queensland, Australia, she was previously Assistant Professor at The University of Western Australia. She is the author of Heritage Conservation in Japans Cultural Diplomacy (2014), which establishes a pioneering theoretical nexus between the politics of cultural diplomacy, heritage conservation, and national identity and interest, and has become a focus for scholars in a range of disciplines. She is also the co-editor of Intangible Heritage (2009, with Laurajane Smith). Her research focuses on the way heritage assembles histories, memories, identities and emotions as articulated in policies, practices and imaginaries. She is Expert Member and Vice-President of the International Committee on Intangible Heritage of ICOMOS. She has been a visiting research fellow at the EastWest Centre and University of Hawaii, Manoa, as well as a Fellow at the International Institute of Asian Studies with Leiden University, Netherlands.

Laurajane Smith is Professor and Director of the Centre of Heritage and Museum Studies, and Head of the School of Archaeology and Anthropology at the Australian National University. She has authored Uses of Heritage (2006) and Archaeological Theory and the Politics of Cultural Heritage (2004), and co-authored Heritage, Communities and Archaeology (2013). Her edited books include Heritage, Labour and the Working Classes (2011, with Paul A. Shackel and Gary Campbell), Representing Enslavement and Abolition in Museums (2011, with G. Cubitt, R. Wilson and K. Fouseki) and Intangible Heritage (2009, with Natsuko Akagawa). She is editor of the International Journal of Heritage Studies and co-general editor (with William Logan) of the series Key Issues in Cultural Heritage.