<eBook>
Whose heritage? : challenging race and identity in Stuart Hall's post-nation Britain

Responsibility
Creator
Language
Publisher
Year
Place
Abstract "This edited collection challenges and re-imagines what is 'heritage' in Britain as a globalised, vernacular, cosmopolitan 'post-nation'. It takes its inspiration from the foundational work of public ...intellectual Stuart Hall (1932-2014). Hall was instrumental in calling out embedded elitist conceptions of 'The Heritage' of Britain. The book's authors challenge us to reconsider what is valued about Britain's past, its culture and its citizens. Populist discourses around the world, including Brexit and 'culture war' declarations in the UK, demonstrate how heritage and ideas of the past are mobilised in racist politics. The multidisciplinary chapters of this book offer critical inspections of these politics, and dig deeply into the problems of theory, policy and practice in today's academia, society and heritage sector. The volume challenges the lack of action since Hall rebuked 'The Heritage' twenty years ago. The authors featured here are predominantly Black Britons, academics and practitioners engaged in culture and heritage, spurred by the killing of George Floyd and the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement to contest racist practices and structures that support them. This fact alone makes the volume a unique addition to the Routledge Museum & Heritage Studies repertoire. The primary audience will be academics, but it will also attract culture sector practitioners and heritage institutions. However, the book is particularly aimed at scholars and community members who identify as Black, who are centrally concerned with questions of identity and race in British society. Its Open Access status will facilitate access to the book by all groups in society"--show more
Table of Contents Introduction : on Stuart Hall and the imagining of heritage
Susan Ashley and Degna Stone
Whose heritage? Un-settling 'the heritage' re-imagining the post-nation
Stuart Hall
'The way in which we learn to sing' : the heritage of ideas behind 'whose heritage?'
Matt Martin
Race equality in the cultural heritage sector : perceptions of progress over the last twenty years and actions for the next decade
Clara Arokiasamy
Mothers milk or regurgitated fish? : resisting nostalgia and embracing dissension in British heritage
Don P. O'Meara
Beyond our system of objects : heritage collecting, hoarding and ephemeral objects
Errol Francis
Historical methods implicated in the making of 'the heritage'
Leonie Wieser
Whose heritage? Deconstructing and reconstructing counter narratives in heritage
Sandra Shakespeare, Qanitah Malik And Edinam Edem-Jordjie
In the shadow of Stuart Hall
Dawn Walton
The Black British presence on television in Barrie Keeffe's Play for today (BBC1) dramas and beyond
Tom May
Narrative cannibals : who speaks for whom? Heritage, documentary practice and the strategies of power
Tina Gharavi
Searching for new perspectives on heritage : the Transatlantic trade in enslaved Africans
Beverley Prevatt Goldstein
Brand new, second hand : production, preservation and 'new' diasporic forms
Etienne Joseph
Crisis of authority : rebuilding the heritage narrative in Stuart Hall's post-nation state
Rosie Lewis
The power to represent
Degna Stone.
show more
View fulltext Taylor & Francis eBooks (Open Access): 2023
OAPEN (Open Access Publishing in European Networks): 2023
DOAB Directory of Open Access Books: 2023

Details

Record ID
Database Title
Subject
Control Number
eISBN
XISBN
Created Date 2023.09.29
Modified Date 2024.01.30