<span>Heritage became a target during the Yugoslav Wars as part of ethnic cleansing and urbicide. Out of the ashes of war, pasts were remodelled, places took on new layers of meaning, and a wave of new memorialization took hold. Three decades since the fall of Vukovar and the end of the siege of Sar
Theorizing Heritage through Non-Violent Resistance (Palgrave Studies in Cultural Heritage and Conflict)
â Scribed by Feras Hammami; Evren Uzer
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⊠Table of Contents
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Contents
Notes on Contributors
List of Figures
List of Tables
Chapter 1: Introduction: Linking Heritage to Resistance
The Book: Process and Structure
References
Chapter 2: Exercising Our Rights to Past: Emergent Heritage Activism in Istanbul
Right to Appropriation: Going Beyond the Right to Use
Heritage as Leverage for the Right to the City Claims
Infrastructures of Resistance: Threads of Gezi Park Protests
Bostan as the Site of Emergent Heritage Activism
Heritage Pedagogies
Challenging Legal Framework
Activism Challenging Status Quo or Reproducing Power Relations (Emergent Activists Versus Locals)
Concluding Remarks
References
Chapter 3: Acting Out the Future of the Albanian National Theatre: New Heritage at the Intersection of Resistance and New Media
Introduction
Heritage, Resistance, and New Heritage
A Note on Methods
Placing the National Theatre in the City and in the Debate
From Wall to Wall: New Media and Participation
Constructing a New Heritage Discourse: Imagining the National Theatre via New Media
Projecting Futures with New Heritage
Conclusion
References
Chapter 4: Mapping More-than-Nostalgia of the âPitsâ: Heritage Co-production as a Creative Resistance to Deindustrialization
Introduction
Heritage and Resistance: A Paradigm for Change
Mapping More than Nostalgia: Grassroots Engagements with the Industrial Past
Nostalgia: A Form of Resistance?
Mapping
Mapping Heritage Value(s) in Northeast England: The Ryhope Fieldwork
Legend to the Map
The Photo Album (Photographs by Beamish Museum Curators but Chosen by Project Participants, and Accompanied by Local Community Membersâ Comments)
Final Reflections
References
Chapter 5: Authenticity and Struggle: Historicising Skateboarding as âAction Artâ on Londonâs South Bank
Introduction
Authenticity in the Literature
Theorising Authenticity
Connections Between Theory and the Fieldwork
The Context for the Research
Arts, Culture and Political Struggle on the South Bank
Action Art
From Elitism to Grant-Based Mobilisation
The Turn to Consumerism
Assembling Authenticity: âAction Artâ on the South Bank
Organisational Consolidation
Discourse and Experience in Dialogue
The Narratives that Emerged
An Architectural Investigation of âAction Artâ
Implications for Conservation Practice
References
Chapter 6: Imagining Heritage Beyond Proprietorship, Contesting Dispossession Beyond the Power-Resistance Binary: Occupy-Style Protests in Turkey, 2013â2014
Introduction
Inheriting Dispossession
Mobilizing Vulnerability Through Heritage in Multiple Directions Across Time
Rethinking the Conventions of Proprietorship-Based Heritage
Conclusion
References
Chapter 7: Fighting Denial of the Right to the Past: Heritage-Backed Bodily Resistance and Performance of Refugeeism and Return
âWe Wonât Forgetâ: Heritage of Expulsion, Absence, and Return
Iqrit: Direct Actions, Multiple Expulsions, and Returns
We Are Not Refugees: Precarity, Disinheritance, and Citizenship
Return in Time and Space: Bodily Resistance and Memory Production
Closing Remarks: Arming Non-violent Resistance with Heritage?
References
Chapter 8: Reproductions, Excavations and Replicas: New Materialities in Response to Destruction
Unexpected Archaeologies
The Threat of Disappearance
Preservation as Destruction
References
Chapter 9: Ethnoscaping Green Resistance: Heritage and the Fight Against Fracking
Introduction
The Whiteness of Green
Fighting for Our (Green/White) Future
Ethnoscapes, and Nationalism as Myth
Fracking Hell (UK): The âGreen and Pleasant Landâ
Lock the Gate Alliance: âThe Wide Brown Land for Me!â
Chase Shell Oil Out of the Karoo!: âOur Heartlandâ
Of âEcological Indiansâ and Colonization Anxiety
Conclusion
References
Chapter 10: The Epistemic Work of Decolonization and Restitution: A Critical Conversation
References
Chapter 11: Methodological Insights Within the Intersection of Heritage and Resistance Research
Introduction
Research Ethics and Ethical Considerations
Challenges and Dilemmas
Opportunities: Working with Transdisciplinary/Mixed Methodologies
Methodological Shifts: Epistemology and Interdisciplinarity
Decolonizing Heritage Methodologies
Scholar Activism
References
Chapter 12: Heritage and Resistance: Theoretical Insights
Introduction
Heritage and Resistance: Background, Definitions, and Intersection
On Heritage and Its Links to Resistance
On Resistance and Its Links to Heritage
On the Intersection of Heritage and Resistance
Theoretical Framework Shifts: Values, Rights, and Justice
Conclusion: Shifting Disciplinary and Practice Silos
References
Index
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