Abstract
This discussion features an ongoing conversation that seeks to reveal the way that preservation practices arise from or react to uniquely “Islamic” articulations of material and immaterial cultural traditions. Although the aim of this debate is to further ethical cultural heritage preservation practices, it reveals a tension between two intellectual debates within critical heritage studies: on the one hand, a concern for the study, articulation, and stewardship of alternative heritage preservation approaches and, on the other hand, a concern with a tendency in heritage preservation to Orientalize “non-Western” heritage preservation practices as forcefully distinct from long-established “Western” practices.
| Original language | English (US) |
|---|---|
| Title of host publication | The Oxford Handbook of Islamic Archaeology |
| Publisher | Oxford University Press |
| Pages | 691-706 |
| Number of pages | 16 |
| ISBN (Electronic) | 9780199987870 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Nov 10 2020 |
All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes
- General Social Sciences
- General Arts and Humanities
Keywords
- Alterity
- Ethnography
- Heritage
- Non-western
- Orientalism
- Western heritage