Friction or Closure: Heritage as Loss

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Standard

Friction or Closure : Heritage as Loss. / Lundahl, Mikela.

I: Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research, Bind 6, Nr. 2014, 2014, s. 1299-1318.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Lundahl, M 2014, 'Friction or Closure: Heritage as Loss', Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research, bind 6, nr. 2014, s. 1299-1318. <http://www.cultureunbound.ep.liu.se/contents.asp?doi=10.3384/cu.2000.1525.1467>

APA

Lundahl, M. (2014). Friction or Closure: Heritage as Loss. Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research, 6(2014), 1299-1318. http://www.cultureunbound.ep.liu.se/contents.asp?doi=10.3384/cu.2000.1525.1467

Vancouver

Lundahl M. Friction or Closure: Heritage as Loss. Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research. 2014;6(2014):1299-1318.

Author

Lundahl, Mikela. / Friction or Closure : Heritage as Loss. I: Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research. 2014 ; Bind 6, Nr. 2014. s. 1299-1318.

Bibtex

@article{b90be53f421e47a49eedc3c5ef87bc3c,
title = "Friction or Closure: Heritage as Loss",
abstract = "Heritage is a discourse that aims at closure. It fixates the narrative of the past through the celebration of specific material (or sometimes immaterial non-) ob-jects. It organizes temporality and construct events and freezes time. How does this unfold in the case of the UNESCO World Heritage site of Stone Town, Zan-zibar? It is a place of beauty and violence, of trade, slavery and tourism, and the World Heritage narrative does not accommodate all its significant historical facts and lived memories. In this article I will discuss some of these conflicting or competing historical facts.The anthropologist Anna Tsing has developed the concept-metaphor friction as a way to discuss the energy created when various actors narrate “the same” event(s) in different ways, and see the other participants{\textquoteright} accounts as fantasies or even fabrications. I will use my position as researcher and my relations to differ-ent sources: informants, authorities and texts, and discuss how different accounts relate to and partly construct each other; and how I, in my own process as an ana-lyst and listener, negotiate these conflicting stories, what I identify as valid and non valid accounts. The case in this article is Stone Town in Zanzibar and the de-velopment and dissolution going on under the shadow of the UNESCO World Heritage flag; a growing tourism; a global and local increase in islamisation; and the political tension within the Tanzanian union. My main focus is narratives of the identity of Zanzibar since heritagization constructs identity.",
author = "Mikela Lundahl",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
pages = "1299--1318",
journal = "Culture Unbound",
issn = "2000-1525",
publisher = "Link{\"o}ping University Electronic Press",
number = "2014",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Friction or Closure

T2 - Heritage as Loss

AU - Lundahl, Mikela

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Heritage is a discourse that aims at closure. It fixates the narrative of the past through the celebration of specific material (or sometimes immaterial non-) ob-jects. It organizes temporality and construct events and freezes time. How does this unfold in the case of the UNESCO World Heritage site of Stone Town, Zan-zibar? It is a place of beauty and violence, of trade, slavery and tourism, and the World Heritage narrative does not accommodate all its significant historical facts and lived memories. In this article I will discuss some of these conflicting or competing historical facts.The anthropologist Anna Tsing has developed the concept-metaphor friction as a way to discuss the energy created when various actors narrate “the same” event(s) in different ways, and see the other participants’ accounts as fantasies or even fabrications. I will use my position as researcher and my relations to differ-ent sources: informants, authorities and texts, and discuss how different accounts relate to and partly construct each other; and how I, in my own process as an ana-lyst and listener, negotiate these conflicting stories, what I identify as valid and non valid accounts. The case in this article is Stone Town in Zanzibar and the de-velopment and dissolution going on under the shadow of the UNESCO World Heritage flag; a growing tourism; a global and local increase in islamisation; and the political tension within the Tanzanian union. My main focus is narratives of the identity of Zanzibar since heritagization constructs identity.

AB - Heritage is a discourse that aims at closure. It fixates the narrative of the past through the celebration of specific material (or sometimes immaterial non-) ob-jects. It organizes temporality and construct events and freezes time. How does this unfold in the case of the UNESCO World Heritage site of Stone Town, Zan-zibar? It is a place of beauty and violence, of trade, slavery and tourism, and the World Heritage narrative does not accommodate all its significant historical facts and lived memories. In this article I will discuss some of these conflicting or competing historical facts.The anthropologist Anna Tsing has developed the concept-metaphor friction as a way to discuss the energy created when various actors narrate “the same” event(s) in different ways, and see the other participants’ accounts as fantasies or even fabrications. I will use my position as researcher and my relations to differ-ent sources: informants, authorities and texts, and discuss how different accounts relate to and partly construct each other; and how I, in my own process as an ana-lyst and listener, negotiate these conflicting stories, what I identify as valid and non valid accounts. The case in this article is Stone Town in Zanzibar and the de-velopment and dissolution going on under the shadow of the UNESCO World Heritage flag; a growing tourism; a global and local increase in islamisation; and the political tension within the Tanzanian union. My main focus is narratives of the identity of Zanzibar since heritagization constructs identity.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 6

SP - 1299

EP - 1318

JO - Culture Unbound

JF - Culture Unbound

SN - 2000-1525

IS - 2014

ER -

ID: 136769310