Intangible and Tangible Heritage in a Cross-cultural Setting: Integrity Versus Profit

Publication Date
2016-07-01
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Used by permission: Green Lines Institute for Sustainable Development

The abstracts of this conference proceeding may be accessed from the publisher here.

Staff and Students of Avondale College may access this conference paper from the Avondale College Library (303.482 L67-2).

Abstract

The paper explores the impact of cross-cultural integration on the intangible and tangible heritage and its sustainability. It argues that the processes of acculturation generate a distancing between the original creators of the heritage and the narratives attached to the cultural entities in a new setting. The named detachment demises the originality and uniqueness of the local heritage expressed in language, rites, dressing, greetings, music, folklore, religion, cultural monuments, and sites. More so detrimental to the original ‘spirit of the place,’ are the new cultural modes imposed by time and change. In the context of the named challenges, this study aims to reinforce the significant role the original local culture plays in the progressively changing world. The defined cultural spaces of the local heritage, engrossed in the shared experiences and collective memories, enshrine the community cultural character and identity. These, in turn, provide an environment conducive to stability, safety, and an inspirational springboard for expressions evidenced both in tangible and intangible heritage. More so, it suggests that a clearly delineated cultural identity of the intangible heritage provides a motivational framework not only for creative expressions in the present but also a motivational for creative expressions in the future.

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Keywords
integration, sustainability, spirit of the place, collective memories, acculturation, change, shared experiences, distancing
Citation

Skrzypaszek, J. (2016). Intangible and tangible heritage in a cross-cultural setting: Integrity versus profit. In R. Amoeda, S. Lira, & C. Pinheiro (Eds.), Heritage 2016. Paper presented at the International Conference on Heritage and Sustainable Development, University of Lisbon, Lisbon, 12-15 July (pp. 1003-1012). Barcelos, Portugal: Green Lines Institute for Sustainable Development.

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9789 898 734 143