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Call for papers for Association of Critical Heritage Studies Third Biennial Conference: What does heritage change?

Date

Montreal, Canada, 6-10 June 2016
Conference theme: What does heritage change?
Session OS068: Heritage Futures / Utopian Currents

As part of next year's Association of Critical Heritage Studies Biennial Conference, Helen Graham and Liz Stainforth of the Centre for Critical Studies in Museums Galleries and Heritage are organising a panel on the theme of Heritage Futures/Utopian Currents.

The notion of heritage is closely linked to processes of change. In the Western context, the definition of heritage as ‘a contemporary product shaped from history’ (see Harvey 2010) highlights the extent to which our relationship with the past is being continually re-configured. However, there is a future dimension implied in this relationship that is often neglected; to paraphrase William Morris, the sense in which heritage testifies to the hopes and aspirations of those now passed away. Making the future-oriented aspect explicit is both an acknowledgement of the inevitability of change and an opening for thinking about the changes envisaged by former generations. In other words, heritage is not only a record of the past but also a history of what people imagined the future might be.

These logics of the future speak directly – as utopianism always does – to different social and political imaginaries. How do such temporal logics relate to alternative heritage scenarios? What kind of politics is implied by ideas of ‘forever, for everyone’ (UK National Trust slogan)? What sort of imaginaries might open up political potentials for heritage and have implications for decision-making processes? How might we diagnose utopian tendencies in heritage practices?

This session invites contributions on utopian currents in the field of critical heritage studies. The perspective of historical futures will be used to shed light on a range of case-based topics, as well as raising the question of our own present, and how contemporary heritage practices might hold open or foreclose possible futures.

The session encourages proposals on themes including, but not limited to:

  • Heritage futures based on current practices.
  • The social and political imaginaries involved in heritage practices and writing about heritage.
  • Logics of time and the negotiation of the past and the future within heritage studies (through, for example, conservation, interpretation, participation).
  • Critical heritage approaches to the temporal politics of heritage.
  • Diagnoses of utopian currents in heritage case studies.
  • Discussions of heritage in relation to the hopes/fears of particular groups or communities of people.
  • Examples of utopian interventions oriented towards change, or alternative heritage decision-making processes.

Association of Critical Heritage Studies conference 2016 Montreal posterSubmission details

Submission deadline: November 1st 2015

If you would like to contribute a proposal, please submit your 600 word abstract and biographical notice via the web portal at https://achs2016.uqam.ca/secure/submitAbstract.php

To find out more about the conference, please visit: http://achs2016.uqam.ca/en/submissions/open-sessions.html

For more information abut this panel contact:
Helen Graham and Liz Stainforth
H.Graham@leeds.ac.uk
E.M.Stainforth@leeds.ac.uk
Centre for Critical Studies in Museums, Galleries and Heritage
School of Fine Art, History of Art and Cultural Studies, University of Leeds