Memory and Cultural Landscape at the Khami World Heritage Site, Zimbabwe

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A01=Ashton Sinamai
African heritage conservation case study
Author_Ashton Sinamai
BCC
BSAC
Category=GLZ
Category=NKD
community identity negotiation
complex
Contemporary Societies
Cultural Landscape Approach
cultural memory studies
culture
Dry Stone Walls
Eastern Botswana
epistemic violence
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
great
Great Zimbabwe
heritage management
Heritage Places
hill
Hill Complex
Historical Monuments Commission
list
monuments
Mutapa State
national
Ndebele Identity
Ndebele State
Nic Craith
places
plateau
postcolonial archaeology
Postcolonial Zimbabwe
property
southern Africa heritage
Victoria Falls
World Heritage
World Heritage Cultural Landscape
World Heritage List
World Heritage Properties
World Heritage Site
World Heritage Site Management Plan
Young Man
Zimbabwe Culture
Zimbabwe Plateau

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138496385
  • Weight: 554g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Sep 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book focuses on a forgotten place—the Khami World Heritage site in Zimbabwe. It examines how professionally ascribed values and conservation priorities affect the cultural landscape when there is a disjuncture between local community and national interests, and explores the epistemic violence that often accompanied colonial heritage management and archaeology in southern Africa. The central premise is that the history of the modern Zimbabwe nation, in terms of what is officially remembered and celebrated, inevitably determines how that past is managed. It is about how places are experienced and remembered through narratives and how the loss of this heritage memory may mark the un-inheriting of place.

Memory and Cultural Landscape at the Khami World Heritage Site, Zimbabwe is informed by the author’s experience of living near and working at Great Zimbabwe and Khami as an archaeologist, and uses archives and traditional narratives to build a biography for this lost cultural landscape. Whereas Great Zimbabwe is a resource for the state’s contentious narrative of unity, and a tool for cultural activism among communities whose cultural rights are denied through the nationalisation and globalisation heritage, at Khami, which has lost its historical gravity, there is only silence.

Researchers and students of cultural heritage will find this book a much-needed case study on heritage, identity, community and landscape from an African perspective.

Ashton Sinamai is a Zimbabwean archaeologist who is currently an Adjunct Research Fellow with the College of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences at Flinders University, Australia. Previously, he was a Marie Curie Experienced Fellow in the Department of Archaeology at the University of York, UK. Ashton has done some work in eastern and southern Africa and has published widely on heritage studies in these regions. He obtained his PhD in Cultural Heritage and Museum Studies at Deakin University, Australia, and acquired an understanding of other perceptions of heritage among the people who live near Great Zimbabwe, where he grew up and later worked as an archaeologist for National Museums and Monuments of Zimbabwe. He has also worked as Chief Curator for the Namibian Museum. Ashton is a co-editor of Journal of African Cultural Heritage Studies.

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