Cultural Contestation Heritage, Identity and the Role of Government
Heritage practices often lead to social exclusion, as such practices can favor certain values over others. In some cases, exclusion from a society’s symbolic landscape can spark controversy, or rouse emotion so much so that they result in cultural contest
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A R C H I TCEUCLT T UURREA, LU R B A N SCPOANCTEE AS NTAD TWI OA RN ETRIIOTAG ED, IRDE E TST TRU ATNI O DNTOHFES A R A J E VO T H E D E ST S T RU RH UC N AN CN ON SI T RYU C VO RO L E O F G O V E R N M E N T
Mirjana Mi M i rj rEdited j an a na Ristic Riiby R sstt ic ic Jeroen Rodenberg and Pieter Wagenaar
Palgrave Studies in Cultural Heritage and Conflict Series Editors Ihab Saloul University of Amsterdam Amsterdam, The Netherlands Rob van der Laarse University of Amsterdam Amsterdam, The Netherlands Britt Baillie Centre for Urban Conflicts Research University of Cambridge Cambridge, UK
This book series explores the relationship between cultural heritage and conflict. The key themes of the series are the heritage and memory of war and conflict, contested heritage, and competing memories. The series editors seek books that analyze the dynamics of the past from the perspective of tangible and intangible remnants, spaces, and traces as well as heritage appropriations and restitutions, significations, musealizations, and mediatizations in the present. Books in the series should address topics such as the politics of heritage and conflict, identity and trauma, mourning and reconciliation, nationalism and ethnicity, diaspora and intergenerational memories, painful heritage and terrorscapes, as well as the mediated reenactments of conflicted pasts. Dr. Ihab Saloul is associate professor of cultural studies, founder and research vice-director of the Amsterdam School for Heritage, Memory and Material Culture (AHM) at University of Amsterdam. Saloul’s interests include cultural memory and identity politics, narrative theory and visual analysis, conflict and trauma, Diaspora and migration as well as contemporary cultural thought in the Middle East.Professor Rob van der Laarse is research director of the Amsterdam School for Heritage, Memory and Material Culture (AHM), and Westerbork Professor of Heritage of Conflict and War at VU University Amsterdam. Van der Laarse’s research focuses on (early) modern European elite and intellectual cultures, cultural landscape, heritage and identity politics, and the cultural roots and postwar memory of the Holocaust and other forms of mass violence. Dr. Britt Baillie is a founding member of the Centre for Urban Conflict Studies at the University of Cambridge, and a research fellow at the University of Pretoria. Baillie’s interests include the politicization of cultural heritage, heritage and the city, memory and identity, religion and conflict, theories of destruction, heritage as commons, contested heritage, and urban resistance. More information about this series at http://www.palgrave.com/gp/series/14638
Jeroen Rodenberg · Pieter Wagenaar Editors
Cultural Contestation Heritage, Identity and the Role of Government
Foreword by Marc Howard Ross
Editors Jeroen Rodenberg Department of Political Science and Public Administration VU University Amsterdam Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, The Netherlands
Pieter Wagenaar Department of Political Science and Public Administration VU University
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