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Colonial Heritage, Power, and Contestation : Negotiating Decolonisation in Latin America and the Caribbean
Colonial Heritage, Power, and Contestation : Negotiating Decolonisation in Latin America and the Caribbean
Autore Malig Jedlicki Camila Andrea
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Cham : , : Springer International Publishing AG, , 2024
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (294 pages)
Altri autori (Persone) OostermanNaomi
ChristofolettiRodrigo
Collana The Latin American Studies Book Series
ISBN 3-031-37748-6
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Intro -- Contents -- Editors and Contributors -- Introduction to Colonial Heritage, Power, and Contestation -- References -- Paths of Decolonisation -- Curre nt Times, Critical, and Future Thinking -- 1 Introduction -- 2 On Current Times, Critical, and Future Thinking -- 3 Rights-Led Approaches to Dissonant and Contested Heritage -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Caring for Black Monuments -- 1 Introduction: The Coloniality of Heritage in Havana -- 2 "¡Túmbenlo!" (Tear It Down!): The Restoration of the Monument to José Miguel Gómez and the Garden of Fallen Monuments in Havana -- 3 Caring for Quintín Bandera: Callejón de Hamel and the Public Celebration of Blackness -- 4 Conclusion: Heritage as a Site of Affective and Embodied Encounter -- References -- Negotiating Decolonisation? -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Heritage, Politics, Identity: Imagining the Community -- 3 Museums, Exhibitions, Politics of Representation: Cultural Governance in Postcolonial Contexts -- 4 Case Study: Envisioning Independence in Casa de la Libertad, Sucre, Bolivia -- 5 Memories, Places, Genders: Negotiating Decolonisation? -- 6 Concluding Remarks -- References -- Restitution and Repatriation of Culture -- (De)colonially Negotiating the Past -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Theoretical Framework -- 3 The Quimbaya Treasure -- 3.1 1890: Excavation and Circulation-From the Subsoil of Colombia to the Enthrallment of Europeans -- 3.2 1892-1893: State Acquisition, Exhibition and Gift-Colonial Heritage Diplomacy from the Colombian Creole Elite in Search of External Projection -- 3.3 1970 to the Present: Restitution Requests-Colombian Decolonial Heritage Diplomacy in Search of Affirmation -- 3.4 2018 to Present: Unambiguous Intention to Retain-The Spanish Official Responses Based in a Legalistic Perspective of Cultural Property -- 4 Final Considerations -- References -- The Reason for the Artifact.
1 Introduction -- 2 Indigenous Cultural Heritage as a Tool -- 2.1 The Importance of Indigenous Cultural Heritage -- 3 International Standards on the Human Rights of Indigenous Peoples on Cultural Heritage and Repatriation -- 3.1 The Hague Convention of 1954 -- 3.2 The UNESCO Convention of 1970 -- 3.3 The UNIDROIT Convention of 1995 -- 3.4 United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples of 2007 -- 4 The Repatriation of Cultural Goods and Human Rights -- 5 The Cultural Reappropriation of Repatriated Cultural Goods -- 5.1 Human Rights: Cultural Reappropriation as an Attribution of the State -- 6 Concluding Remarks -- References -- Repatriation of Cultural Heritage and Their Museographic Use from a Decolonial Perspective -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Heritage, Decolonization, and Restitution -- 3 Why Should Demands for Restitution and Repatriation of Cultural Property Be the Subject of Postcolonial and Decolonial Studies? -- 4 Dispute and Return of Archaeological Heritage of Machu Picchu -- 5 About the Permanent Exhibition "Recovered Heritage: Assets of Our Peruvian Identity" -- 6 How to Make Demands for the Return of Cultural Heritage of Historical Reparation? -- 7 Conclusion -- References -- Restitution of Indigenous Cultural Objects in Latin America -- 1 Introduction -- 2 NAGPRA -- 2.1 Origins and Content -- 2.2 Effects -- 3 Restitution of Indigenous Cultural Objects in Latin America -- 3.1 A Brief Overview -- 3.2 Brief Reference to Experiences in Regulation and Practice -- 4 Beyond Participation: Considering Indigenous Rules and Practices -- 5 Discussion -- References -- The Veins of Latin America Remain Open -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Tragedy of Colonialism and Coloniality: Material and Intellectual Dispossession -- 3 Postcolonial and Decolonial Studies -- 4 Authorized Heritage Discourse (AHD) and UNESCO World Heritage Sites.
5 The Farce: Cultural Goods Trade and the Veins that Remain Open -- 5.1 Trade in Cultural Goods -- 5.2 A Crime that Pays Off: The Illicit Trafficking of Cultural Properties -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Museums, Discourse, and Power -- Entangled Heritage -- 1 Introduction -- 2 An Overseas Museum for Portugal -- 3 "Collection Trips"-Ethnography as a Collection Practice -- 4 From Africa to Portugal, from Portugal to the (Civilized) World -- References -- Denaturalization and Occidental Narrative to the Detriment of the Materiality of Moche and Tupinambá -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Homogeneous Time to the Detriment of "Indigenous Archaeological Artifacts" -- 3 The Tupinambá Mantle -- 4 The Huacos Moche and Their Avatars -- 5 The Moche Subject -- 6 The Subject Tupinambá and His Postcolonial Agency -- 7 Conclusion -- Reference s -- Andean Colonial Paintings -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Medieval Ethos and Modernity -- 3 The Novissimi and the Church of Carabuco -- 3.1 The Last Judgment, San Francisco Convent -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Decolonial Approaches and Narratives in Latin America and the Caribbean and European Museums -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Power, Coloniality, and Decoloniality -- 2.1 Decoloniality in the Museological Context -- 2.2 Return, Restitution, and Repatriation -- 2.3 Latin America and the Caribbean and Europe -- 3 Methodology -- 3.1 Data and Methods -- 3.2 Sample -- 3.3 Latin America and the Caribbean Cases -- 3.4 European Cases -- 4 Results -- 4.1 Legal- and Object-Centred Narrative -- 4.2 Silenced Stories and Discomfort -- 4.3 Communities and Reclamation of Human Rights -- 5 Concluding Remarks -- Reference s -- Frontiers of Decoloniality -- "A Symbol of Alliance and Peace Among American Nations" -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Construction of the Columbus Lighthouse and the Pan-American Flight.
3 The First Inter-American Education Ministers Meeting: A Proposal for Valuing the Americas -- 4 Conclusions -- Reference s -- Decolonialism, Paulo Freire and the Triangular Approach -- 1 Introduction: Historical Context -- 2 Paulo Freire and Arts Education -- 3 Congress on Teaching/Learning the Arts in Latin America: Colonialism and Gender -- 3.1 A Participatory Congress -- 3.2 Preparation for Debates -- 4 The Triangular Approach -- 4.1 Contextualisation -- 4.2 Art Making -- 4.3 Reading Works of Art -- 4.4 Individual and Collective Readings of a Work of Art -- 4.5 The Tree (2018/2020) -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- The Mirror of Modernity -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Modern World Heritage: Considerations on the Emergence of a New Field in the World Heritage Scope -- 3 Brasília and Pampulha Modern World Heritage Sites -- 3.1 Conjunto Urbanístico De Brasília (1987) -- 3.2 Conjunto Moderno Da Pampulha (2016) -- 4 Final Considerations -- References -- Coloniality, Race, and Indigenous Knowledge in Reports of Nineteenth-Century Explorers in Southern Brazil -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Naming and Classifying Indigenous People -- 3 The Empire of Laws -- 4 Conclusion -- References.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910799483603321
Malig Jedlicki Camila Andrea  
Cham : , : Springer International Publishing AG, , 2024
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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International relations and heritage : patchwork in times of plurality / / Rodrigo Christofoletti, Maria Leonor Botelho, editors
International relations and heritage : patchwork in times of plurality / / Rodrigo Christofoletti, Maria Leonor Botelho, editors
Pubbl/distr/stampa Cham, Switzerland : , : Springer, , [2021]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (463 pages)
Disciplina 303.4824920598
Collana Latin American Studies Book Series
Soggetto topico Cultural diplomacy
Historic preservation
Cultural property - Protection
ISBN 3-030-77991-2
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910495166803321
Cham, Switzerland : , : Springer, , [2021]
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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Soft Power and Heritage / / edited by Rodrigo Christofoletti
Soft Power and Heritage / / edited by Rodrigo Christofoletti
Edizione [First edition.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Cham, Switzerland : , : Springer, , [2023]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (466 pages)
Disciplina 363.69
Collana The Latin American Studies Book Series
Soggetto topico Cultural property - Political aspects
Soft power (Political science)
World Heritage areas
ISBN 3-031-41207-9
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Intro -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Editor and Contributors -- 1 Actors, Spaces and Borders of Soft Power: The Heritage in Multiple Looks -- 1.1 Visions on Soft Power: How Did History, International Relations and Heritage Incorporate It? -- References -- Part I Soft Power Actors -- 2 The Supreme Court of History? UNESCO as an Arena for Historiographic Clashes -- 2.1 The Memory of the World Program -- 2.1.1 The Document as a Monument -- 2.1.2 Disputed Memories -- 2.1.3 From Dystopia to Utopia -- References -- 3 Spatial Disposition of UNESCO's Cultural Heritage and Soft Power: A Survey on the Possibility of Reification of Power Discrepancies -- 3.1 UNESCO's World Heritage List -- 3.1.1 Descriptive Statistics -- 3.2 Descriptive Statistics in Time -- 3.3 Inferential Statistics (Multilinear Regression) -- 3.4 Conclusions -- References -- 4 Polycam and the Power of Heritage Registration in the Palm of Your Hand: UNESCO Strategy to Safeguard Memory in Ukraine War -- 4.1 The Set -- 4.2 UNESCOs Concern to Safeguard and Protect Memory -- 4.3 Memory as Access to the Cultural Diversity of Peoples -- 4.4 The Polycam App at the Service of the Soft Power of the West -- 4.5 Conclusions -- References -- 5 Culture of Peace, Soft Power and the Russia-Ukraine Conflict: The Shortcomings of Economic Integration as a Conflict Deterrent and the Potential of Diplomacy and Paradiplomacy for a Culture of Peace -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Considerations on Economic Integration (Hard Power) as a Conflict Deterrent -- 5.3 Soft Power: An Unexplored Potential for Building a Culture of Peace? -- 5.4 The Role of Paradiplomacy Initiatives in Building a Culture of Peace -- 5.5 Conclusion -- References -- 6 Cultural Mercosur: A Regional Vision of Cultural Heritage as Soft Power -- 6.1 It Is Still About the Negation of Rationality -- 6.2 The UNESCO World Heritage List.
6.3 The MERCOSUR List of Cultural Heritage (LPCM) -- 6.4 Cultural Heritage Registered in the LPCM -- 6.5 The Barón de Mauá International Bridge (Uruguay-Brazil) -- 6.6 La Payada/La Paya -- 6.7 The Cultural System of Yerba Mate -- 6.8 Final Considerations -- References -- 7 Heritage Diplomacy Matters? Brazil's Foreign Policy and South-South Cooperation in Cultural Heritage -- 7.1 Culture and International Relations -- 7.2 The Role of Culture in Brazilian Foreign Policy -- 7.3 Cultural Capital and the New Possibilities for Brazil's International Insertion -- 7.4 The State-of-the-Art of Brazilian South-South Cooperation -- 7.5 Brazilian South-South Cooperation in Cultural Heritage and Cultural Assets -- 7.6 Conclusions -- References -- 8 Cultural Heritage as Soft Power: Brazil in International Politics -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 Culture, Identity and Representations -- 8.3 The Culture of Brazil Projected to the World -- 8.4 The Export of the Cordial Brazilian Man -- 8.5 Cultural Diplomacy: Brazil, a Cordial Power? -- 8.6 Preliminary Conclusions -- References -- 9 Brazil's Active and Haughty Policy Toward the African Continent: Between Diplomacy, Soft Power, and Heritage (2002-2008) -- 9.1 Education as a Tool to Strengthen Soft Power -- 9.2 Brazil and Ghana, the Taboos as a Key to Understanding the Construction of Memory Spaces -- 9.3 The Heritage Relationship Between Kuduro and Passinho -- 9.4 Conclusion -- References -- 10 Cultural Heritage as a Potential Soft Power Instrument -- 10.1 Cultural Heritage in Current Geopolitics -- 10.2 Power and Hegemony in International Relations -- 10.3 Cultural Heritage as Soft Power -- 10.4 The Potential Embedded in Soft Power Elements -- References -- Part II Soft Power Spaces -- 11 Universalism and Diversity: The 50th Anniversary of the UNESCO World Heritage Convention.
11.1 The World Heritage Convention and the Globalization of Heritage -- 11.2 Universalism and Diversity: The Malaise of Conservation -- 11.3 Universalism and Diversity: The "Creative Spaces of Friction" -- References -- 12 Discussions on the Fragility of African Soft Power: An Analysis of Democratic Republic of Congo -- 12.1 Some of the Soft Power Objectives -- 12.2 Sources of Soft Power -- 12.3 Other Soft Power Issues -- 12.4 About African Soft Power: In Focus the Democratic Republic of Congo -- 12.5 African's United -- 12.6 The Presence of African's Art Outside -- 12.7 The American and Chinese Soft Power -- 12.8 The Future Soft Power -- 12.9 Final Considerations -- References -- 13 Cultural Experiences of Brazil in Africa: The Management of Intangible Cultural Heritage in the Context of Soft Power -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 The Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity -- 13.3 Soft Power and Globalization -- 13.4 Brazil's South-South Cooperation with Africa -- 13.5 Final Considerations -- References -- 14 The Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage: An Important Soft Power Strategy -- 14.1 Introduction -- 14.2 International Campaign to Save the Monuments of Nubia (1960-1980) -- 14.3 The Main Threats to the Underwater Cultural Heritage -- 14.4 Examples of Some Relevant Cases -- 14.5 Some Legal Aspects of Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage (2001) -- 14.6 The Brazilian Law and Underwater Cultural Heritage -- 14.7 The Soft Power and Underwater Cultural Heritage -- 14.8 Final Remarks -- References -- 15 Destruction of Antiquities, Museums and Archaeological Sites in Syria During the War: Methods of Protecting Them -- 15.1 Reasons for Encroaching and Vandalizing Antiquities -- 15.2 Damage to Archaeological Sites in Syria -- 15.3 Apamea -- 15.4 Krak Des Chevaliers Homs -- 15.5 Museums in the Light of the Crisis.
15.6 The Importance of Research -- 15.7 Measures Taken -- 15.8 Requirements What Must be Done Urgently -- 15.9 Conclusion -- References -- 16 Two Sides of the Same Coin: Illicit Trafficking of Cultural Goods and Repatriation Toward a New Relational Ethics -- 16.1 Conventions and Mechanisms Created to Defend Heritage -- 16.2 Brazil and the Route of Illicit Trafficking of Cultural Goods and Works of Art -- 16.3 Repatriation as Historic Reparation -- 16.4 Final Considerations: Towards a New Relational Ethics -- References -- 17 Circulation of Sacred Art in the Internet Underworld -- 17.1 Illicit Trafficking of Cultural Goods -- 17.2 In the Route of the Sacred Works -- 17.3 Sacred Art in Comtemporaneity -- 17.4 Concluding Remarks -- References -- 18 "We're Back": Background and Outcomes of Repatriation, Return and Restitution of Cultural Property -- 18.1 From Circulation Control to Soft Power -- 18.2 Repatriation, Return and Restitution: Cases to Be Noticed -- 18.3 Canada and India: Restitution of Goddess Annapurna Idol -- 18.4 Côte d´Ivoire and France: Repatriation of Djidji Ayokwé Drum -- 18.5 Considerations -- References -- 19 Colonial Marks in African Museums: Cases from Guinea-Bissau and Senegal -- 19.1 The Museums -- 19.2 Religion: From "Essence of Life" to Ethnographic Curiosity -- 19.3 Islam in a Senegalese Museum -- 19.4 Final Remarks -- References -- Part III Borders Soft Power -- 20 Cultural Heritage and International Cooperation: Lusophone Diplomatic Strategies -- 20.1 Introduction -- 20.2 Culture as a Vector of Integration -- 20.3 The Origins of a Common Heritage -- 20.4 Soft Power and the Power of Language -- 20.5 Cultural Diplomacy: An Action of Governments -- 20.6 Preservation of Cultural Heritage: Possible Paths -- 20.7 Final Considerations -- References.
21 Between the Power of the Museum and the Power of the Community: Case Studies in Portugal and Brazil -- 21.1 Introduction -- 21.2 Soft Power and the Possibility of Producing Uncertain Places -- 21.3 From Authenticity to Places of Narrativised Experience -- 21.4 The Daring Cry from the Margins: 'The Street is the people's Museum'! -- 21.5 Conclusion -- References -- 22 Documentation: A "Tool" of Soft Power in Museums -- 22.1 Introduction -- 22.2 Documentation in Museums or How to Build an Effective "Tool" -- 22.3 Standards: The Ammunition of a Soft Power "Tool" -- 22.4 Documentation in Museums and Soft Power: A "Tool" Available to Museums -- 22.5 Conclusions -- References -- 23 Soft Power and the Rise of the Global South: Chinese Investments in Renewable Energy in Brazil -- 23.1 Introduction -- 23.2 Climate Change and Energy Transition: In Search of a Low-Carbon Economy -- 23.3 Soft Power and Chinese Investment in Energy in the World -- 23.3.1 Chinese Investments in Non-renewable Energy -- 23.3.2 Chinese Investments in Renewable Energy -- 23.3.3 Chinese Investments in Brazilian Energy Production -- 23.4 Final Considerations -- References -- 24 Creating and Using Tais in Timor-Leste: An Intangible Heritage -- 24.1 First Words… -- 24.2 Tais: Intangible Heritage of Timor-Leste -- 24.3 Present and Future of Tais as a Timorese Soft Power -- References -- 25 Soft Power and Brazilian Music Diffusion -- 25.1 Soft Power Concept -- 25.2 Cultural Diplomacy and Soft Power -- 25.3 History of Cultural Diplomacy in Brazil -- 25.4 Conclusion -- References -- 26 Collective Memory of Public Space: A Path for Preservation Through Affective Appropriation -- 26.1 The Voice of the People -- 26.2 The City of Each One of Us -- 26.3 A Semiotic Proposal -- 26.4 Intervention with Preservationist Perspective -- 26.5 Spoliation and Urban Voids.
26.6 History and Hidden Patterns.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910765481003321
Cham, Switzerland : , : Springer, , [2023]
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
World Heritage Patinas : Actions, Alerts and Risks / / edited by Rodrigo Christofoletti, Marcos Olender
World Heritage Patinas : Actions, Alerts and Risks / / edited by Rodrigo Christofoletti, Marcos Olender
Edizione [1st ed. 2021.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Cham : , : Springer International Publishing : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2021
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (560 pages)
Disciplina 363.69
Collana The Latin American Studies Book Series
Soggetto topico Cultural property
Geography
Archaeology
Cultural property - Protection
Historic preservation
Ethnology - Latin America
Culture
Cultural Heritage
Regional Geography
Heritage Management
Conservation and Preservation
Latin American Culture
ISBN 3-030-64815-X
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Part I: Performance of national preservation organization -- Chapter 1. The Brazilian experience of the World Heritage Sites -- Chapter 2. Preservation actors: challenges and risks of managing World heritage cities -- Chapter 3. Current challenges and risks for preservation of the historic center of Salvador -- Chapter 4. World Heritage in Brazil: a reflection and criticism -- Chapter 5. When sensitive memories sites become heritage: the case of the Valongo Wharf, Rio de Janeiro -- Chapter 6. Afro-Brazilian religions and protected urban areas: the cases of Laranjeiras and São Cristóvão, Sergipe -- Chapter 7. The Pampulha Modern Ensemble and its recognition as a UNESCO World Heritage Site -- Chapter 8. Reflections on tourism in Jesuitic-Garani Missions -- Part II: International experiences in preserving the world heritage -- Chapter 9. "Which Egypt will answer"? Some genealogical notes on world heritage -- Chapter 10. The experience of managing the city of Porto as a world heritage site: how to teach and how to learn? -- Chapter 11. World heritage sites in Latin America: conservation and management under a value-based approach -- Chapter 12. Immaterial heritage and the risk of forgetting: the case of the hidden Nagazaki Christians -- Chapter 13. Environmental History and Cultural Landscape in Israel (2003-2020) -- Part III: World heritage risks and threats -- Chapter 14. Brazil in the circuit of international cultural relations: return and devolution of ethnographic goods -- Chapter 15. World Heritage in danger: case studies about some of the factors that threaten cultural sites -- Chapter 16. The risk of fire in the twin buildings of the Ouro Preto historic center: world heritage -- Chapter 17. PlunderersofDevotionalHeritage.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910483598803321
Cham : , : Springer International Publishing : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2021
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui