Global Heritage Assemblages

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A01=Christoph Rausch
African Architecture
African urbanism
Anthropological Problem
architectural
Architectural Innovation
architectural preservation
architecture
Author_Christoph Rausch
Category=GTP
Contemporary Heritage Practices
crystal
cultural
Cultural Heritage Practices
cultural policy analysis
Di Giovine
Dominant Apparatus
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Eritrean Government
Global Heritage Assemblages
heritage conservation
Heritage Practices
list
Maisons Tropicales
modern
Modern Architectural Heritage
Modern Architecture
Modern Heritage
modernity in African architecture
Nation Building
Nubia Campaign
palace
postcolonial studies
practices
preservation
Reflective Nostalgia
Restorative Nostalgia
SPAB
Stylistic Restoration
UN
urban anthropology
Van Der Lans
world
World Heritage
World Heritage Committee
World Heritage List

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367193058
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Jun 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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UNESCO aims to tackle Africa’s under-representation on its World Heritage List by inscribing instances of nineteenth- and twentieth-century modern architecture and urban planning there. But, what is one to make of the utopias of progress and development for which these buildings and sites stand? After all, concern for ‘modern heritage’ invariably—and paradoxically it seems—has to reckon with those utopias as problematic futures of the past, a circumstance complicating intentions to preserve a recent ‘culture’ of modernization on the African continent.

This book, a new title in Routledge’s Studies in Culture and Development series, introduces the concept of ‘global heritage assemblages’ to analyse that problem. Based on extensive anthropological fieldwork, it describes how various governmental, intergovernmental, and non-governmental actors engage with colonial and post-colonial built heritage found in Eritrea, Tanzania, Niger, and the Republic of the Congo. Rausch argues that the global heritage assemblages emerging from those examples produce problematizations of the modern’, which ultimately indicate a contemporary need to rescue modernity from its dominant conception as an all-encompassing, epochal, and spatial culture.

Christoph Rausch is an assistant professor in the Humanities and Social Sciences at University College Maastricht, the Netherlands

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