HomeReverse-Exoticism: Writing Practices, Alternative Voices and Heritagization
Reverse-Exoticism: Writing Practices, Alternative Voices and Heritagization
Reverse-Exoticism: Writing Practices, Alternative Voices and Heritagization
Published on jeudi, avril 08, 2010
Summary
Announcement
2010 Conference: Tourism and Seductions of Difference
Lisbon, Portugal, 10-12 Sept 2010
http://sites.google.com/site/tourismcontactculture/project-definition
While academics have studied ‘heritage’ mainly in terms of a national or elite construction, this panel is interested in the increasingly loud claims to ‘heritage’ emanating from minorities and small social groups. Evoking Michel De Certeau (1988), our emphasis here is on analysing ‘scriptural practices’, both as cultural apparatus and means of production and objectification of minorities’ alternative voices.
In contexts of colonial and social domination, the social identity of many minorities was formed through processes of cultural « exotization ». Exogenous definitions often made it difficult for dominated societies or social classes to claim independent or otherwise autonomous forms of ‘heritage’.
In the recent past, many minorities and small groups have used writing to engage in a process that could be qualified as « reverse-exoticism ». Such a process has become highly visible in the field of literature, the arts and cultural studies, but also in recent normative actions by international organizations, namely Unesco’s Intangible Cultural Heritage Convention (2003) and the European Commission Faro Convention (2005). The access to literacy and thus the ability to tell and write one’s own story appear to have been a key issue marking this turning point in history.
This panel wishes to examine the various motifs underlying the productions of texts by minority groups and their allure within a global cultural economy within which the very idea of ‘minority’ has become a tourist attraction. We welcome papers with a theoretical and/or empirical focus on the role of writing in the construction of ‘inner exoticisms’ and what we term ‘reverse-exoticisms’. Key issues to be discussed are (1) appropriations of transnational ‘heritagization’ patterns by dominated people; (2) social conflicts accompanying or made manifest through processes of ‘heritagization’; and (3) processes of revitalization or defolklorization of cultural practices, both in post-colonial and Western contexts.
Paper proposals (250 words plus contact, scientific affiliation and discipline) are due
by 1st May 2010.
Contacts: isnart@uevora.pt and epires@uevora.pt
Reference:
De Certeau, M 1988 (1984) «The Scriptural Economy», The Practice of Everyday life [translation of Arts de Faire], Berkeley, University of California Press, pp.131-133.
Subjects
- Ethnology, anthropology (Main subject)
- Society > Geography > Migration, immigration, minorities
- Society > Ethnology, anthropology > Cultural anthropology
- Society > Ethnology, anthropology > Political anthropology
- Mind and language > Representation > Heritage
- Society > Political studies > Political and social movements
- Society > Sociology > Sociology of culture
Places
- FCSH campus of Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Av de Berna, 26, 1069-060 Lisboa, Metro San Sebastiano or Campo Pequeno
Lisbon, Portugal
Date(s)
- samedi, mai 01, 2010
Keywords
- Minorities, Heritage, Writing pratices, Exoticism, Anthropology
Contact(s)
- Cyril Isnart
courriel : cyril [dot] ISNART [at] univ-amu [dot] fr
Reference Urls
Information source
- Cyril Isnart
courriel : cyril [dot] ISNART [at] univ-amu [dot] fr
To cite this announcement
« Reverse-Exoticism: Writing Practices, Alternative Voices and Heritagization », Call for papers, Calenda, Published on jeudi, avril 08, 2010, https://calenda-formation.labocleo.org/200795