Cultural Heritage Politics in China

Cultural Heritage Politics in China
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Artikel-Nr:
9781489997616
Veröffentl:
2015
Einband:
Paperback
Erscheinungsdatum:
23.06.2015
Seiten:
316
Autor:
Helaine Silverman
Gewicht:
482 g
Format:
235x155x18 mm
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

Tami Blumenfield is the James B. Duke Assistant Professor of Asian Studies at Furman University. An anthropologist of China and documentary film producer who earned her doctorate at the University of Washington in 2010, she has spent more than four years conducting fieldwork in ethnically diverse regions of southwest China. Supported in part by a Fulbright fellowship and a grant from the Association for Asian Studies China and Inner Asia Council, she has researched educational practices, cultural heritage politics, and social change. Much of her research has explored social change in Na villages located in and around tourist zones near Lugu Lake. Her book manuscript Screening Moso: Communities of Media in Southwest China, supported by a publication fellowship from the American Association for University Women, discusses a collaboration and participatory media project with the Moso Folk Museum. Blumenfield has also begun a project examining growing inequality in tourist areas of northwest Yunnan. She is a founding board member of the Cool Mountain Education Fund, an organization that supports students in Liangshan, China.

Helaine Silverman is a Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Illinois and Director of the Collaborative for Cultural Heritage Management and Policy (CHAMP). She is a member of Forum-UNESCO, an Expert Member of ICOMOS' International Committee on Archaeological Heritage Management (ICAHM), and an affiliate member of ICOMOS's International Scientific Committee on Cultural Tourism (ICTC). Her current research is a critical analysis of the cooperative and conflictual production of archaeological monuments as cultural heritage sites for visual, performative, economic and political consumption as undertaken by national governments, regional authorities, local administrations, community stakeholders, and the global tourism industry. Most of her research around these issues is conductedin Peru. In addition to her own authored works on cultural heritage, tourism and museums, she is the editor of Archaeological Site Museums in Latin America (University Press of Florida, 2006), Cultural Heritage and Human Rights (Springer, 2007), Intangible Heritage Embodied (Springer, 2009) and Contested Cultural Heritage: Religion, Nationalism, Erasure and Exclusion in a Global World (Springer, 2011). She serves on the editorial boards of American Anthropologist, International Journal of Heritage Studies, Heritage & Society, and World Art. She currently edits the "Heritage, Tourism, and Community" book series (Left Coast Press) and is a co-editor of ICAHM's "Multidisciplinary Perspectives in Archaeological Heritage Management" book series (Springer Press).

This volume explores China's cultural heritage ideology and policies from three interrelated perspectives: the State and World Heritage tourism; cultural heritage tourism at undesignated sites, and the cultural politics of museums and collections. Something of a cultural heritage designation craze is happening in China. This is new within even the last five to ten years. Officials at many levels now see heritage preservation as a means for commoditizing their regions. They are devoting new resources and attention to national and international heritage designations. Thus, addressing cultural heritage politics in a nation dedicated to designation is an important project, particularly in the context of a rapidly growing economy. This volume is also important because it addresses a very wide range of cultural heritage, providing an excellent sample of case studies: historic vernacular urban environments, ethnic tourism, scenic tourism, pilgrimage as tourism, tourism and economic development, museums, border heritage, underwater remains, and the actual governance and management of the sites. This volume is an outstanding introduction to cultural heritage issues in China while contributing to Chinese studies for those with greater knowledge of the area.
This book covers China's cultural heritage ideology and policies, examining the State and World Heritage tourism, heritage tourism at undesignated sites and cultural politics of museums. Case studies discuss ethnic and scenic tourism, site management and more.
Explores China's cultural heritage policies from three interrelated perspectives

PART I: INTRODUCTION

1. Cultural Heritage Politics in China: An Introduction

Helaine Silverman and Tami Blumenfield

2. Does the Institution of Property Rights Matter to Heritage Preservation? Evidence from China

TANG Zijun

PART II: Local, Regional, National and International Interests in a World Heritage Era

3. Chinese Cosmopolitanism (tianxia he shijie zhuyi) in China's Heritage Tourism

Margaret Byrne Swain

4. Groping for Stones to Cross the River: Governing Heritage in Emei

Yujie ZHU and Na LI

5. Local versus National Interests in the Promotion and Management of a Heritage Site. A Case Study from Zhejiang Province, China

Wei ZHAO

6. Tourism, Migration and the Politics of Built Heritage in Lijiang, China

Xiaobo SU

7. Dancing in the Market: Reconfiguring Commerce and Heritage in Lijiang

Heather Peters

PART III: CULTURAL HERITAGE AND TOURISM IN UNDESIGNATED SITES

8. Good Fences Make Good Neighbors: Claiming Heritage in the Longji Terraced Fields Scenic Area

Jenny T. CHIO

9. Re-constructing Cultural Heritage and Imagining Wa Primitiveness in the China/Myanmar Borderlands

LIU Tzu-kai

PART IV: THE POLITICS OF MUSEUMS AND COLLECTIONS

10. Beijing's Museums in the Context of the 2008 Olympics

Curtis Ashton

11. Community Empowerment at the Periphery? Participatory Approaches to Heritage Protection in Guizhou, China

William Nitzky

PART V: ROUTES AS HERITAGE - BRANDING SPACE IN A GLOBAL[IZED] CHINA

12. The Ancient Tea Horse Road and the Politics of Heritage in Southwest China: Regional Identity in the Context of a Rising China

Gary Sigley

13. Branding Tengchong: Globalization, Road Building and Spatial Reconfigurations in Yunnan, Southwest China

ZHOU Yongming

14. The Role of Underwater Archaeology in Framing and Facilitating the Chinese National Strategic Agenda

Jeff Adams

PART VI. AFTERWORD

15. China's Tangled Web of Heritage

Stevan Harrell

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