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The Routledge Handbook of Heritage and Gender: Routledge Handbooks on Museums, Galleries and Heritage

Editat de Jenna C. Ashton
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 4 mar 2025
The Routledge Handbook of Heritage and Gender offers an exceptional range of international contributions that interrogate and analyse the interactions within - and between - heritage and gender.
Taking an intersectional and global approach, the Handbook opens up space for a more critical and situated consideration of how gender comes into contact with heritage as a concept and practice. The volume considers heritage in the broadest sense: as a concept, performance, and materialization. The contributions also consider how heritage impacts identity, power, people, values, politics, and ethics, as well as processes and sites across material culture, nature, and intangible practices. The volume and its contributions are inclusive of Cisgender, Trans, Non-Binary, Agender, and Intersex identities. Reflecting the multidisciplinary and transnational voices of its authors, the collection challenges readers to consider what a focused analysis of heritage and gender can offer Heritage Studies as an evolving discipline and field of study.
The Routledge Handbook of Heritage and Gender will be of interest to academics and students working in Heritage Studies, Museum Studies, Art History, History, Anthropology, Gender and Women’s Studies and International Development.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781032192086
ISBN-10: 1032192089
Pagini: 730
Ilustrații: 268
Dimensiuni: 174 x 246 mm
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Routledge Handbooks on Museums, Galleries and Heritage

Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Postgraduate

Cuprins

List of figures; List of contributors; Introduction; PART 1 Materiality and Performance of Gender –1. Gendering Material Objects in Heritage Practice; 2. Bridal Ornaments and Heritage Performances in India: The Case of Kanchipuram Silk Sari,  and Temple Bridal Jewellery; 3. Queerly Intersectional at the Dawn of Heritage Preservation: Judah Touro; 4. Women's Stories Unheard in the Military Border Zone: Kitchen Storytelling as Methodology; 5. Safeguarding Bulgarian Applied Folk Art: the work of Helene Oucheff; 6. The (Miss) representation of women in European prehistory  museum displays: Breaking the glass display case; PART 2 Gendered Heritage Landscapes – 7. The Representation of Rosa Parks on the American Civil Rights  Memorial Landscape: “Trapped on the Bus”; 8. Gender and Heritage at Home at the Pankhurst Centre and Potter’s Hill Top; 9. A Queer Manipulation of the Sheats-Goldstein House: ‘Quite a pad you got here, man’; 10. Contested Transcultural Spaces: The Mother Goddess Religion’s Sacred Sites and Rituals  in Huế City, Vietnam; 11. Heritage interpretation and first-person narratives: producing a feminist reading of cultural  landscapes; 12. An ethnoarchaeology of precolonial gold mining and the role of women in Eastern  Zimbabwe; 13. Industrial Archaeologies of artists Edna Lumb and Angela Croome: Curating Aggregate; PART 3 Violence as Gender Heritage – 14. Sexual Violence in Premodern South Asian Literature: Unsavoury heritage; 15. Trauma, Memory, and Identity of Women in Cambodia Diaspora; 16. The Representation of Sexual Violence in the Arts and Memory  Space Fragmentos, Colombia: Overwritten memories; 17. The Casa de la Memoria Kaji Tulam and the Reinterpretation of Guatemalan History: Women behind the door; 18. Women’s Monumental Activism: Statues that Matter; PART 4 Arts-led Methodologies for Remembrance and Activation –19. The Performative Legacies of the Women’s Peace Camp at Greenham  Common: Beyond monuments; 20. The Illustrator in the Archive of Suffragette Katie Gliddon; 21. Recovering the excluded women in English folk and calendar customs: Social art as a  research methodology; 22. Mithila Folk Art: A Feminist Perspective; 23. Deconstruction of Orientalism through Feminist Art in Turkey: Challenging legacy; 24. Doing difficult heritage, performing diasporic memory: Yoshiko Shimada and Haji Oh’s art  of affective recall; PART5 Digital and Media Interventions for Gender Advocacy – 25. Confronting Gender Biases in Heritage Catalogues: A Natural Language Processing  Approach to Revisiting Descriptive Metadata; 26. Using Apps to Promote Women Artists and Intervene in Gender  Politics; 27. Intangible Cultural Heritage, Gender, and Media: A multimodal content analysis of the  UNESCO nomination films; 28. Autonomous Archives and reframing feminist heritage in the context of Covid-19; PART 6 Nationhood, Politics, and Gender –29. Nordic gender ideals and the Viking Age: an unresolved legacy; 30. Feminist and Democratic Heritage: Lessons from Spain; 31. Gendered dimensions of intangible heritage in Europe: The political pasts and presents in  Italy and Poland; 32. Making Gendered Heritage Invisible in Modern Iran and the politics of erasure; PART 7 Gender in Heritage Leadership and Governance – 33. Gender and museum leadership: ‘Excuse Me, I’m Speaking!’; 34. Gender as frontstage issue and backstage problem in current museum practices and research; 35. A gendered transnational analysis of future heritage through  national museums’ contemporary art collections: Mind the gender gap?; 36. Gender perspectives in the governance of cultural heritage institutions; PART 8 Futures of Feminist and Queer Heritage – 37. The Uses of Queer Heritage; 38. Critical contexts and proposals for a feminist heritage studies and feminist mnemopraxis; 39. A transnational feminist perspective on the representation of  women in UNESCO’s World Heritage Convention and Convention for Safeguarding the  Intangible Cultural Heritage: Only wives and mothers?; 40. Interpretation of Cultural Heritage from a Gender Perspective: The Women's Legacy White  Paper experience; 41. Development of discourse on the intersection of heritage and gender within ICOMOS; Index.

Notă biografică

Jenna C. Ashton is a Senior Lecturer in Heritage Studies, University of Manchester. She is an arts practice researcher working on cultural analysis and theory at the nexus between community heritage,  ecologies, place, and social and environmental justice. She has a background in artmaking, exhibition  curation, creative producing, and arts-education. Previous edited collections include Feminism and  Museums Vol 1: Intervention, Disruption and Change (2017), Feminism and Museums Vol 2: Intervention, Disruption and Change (2018), and Anonymous Was a Woman: A  Museums and Feminism Reader (2020). Her monograph, Urban Communities and  Climate Justice: Insights from Arts-Practice Research, is forthcoming.

Descriere

The Routledge Handbook of Heritage and Gender offers an exceptional range of international contributions that interrogate and analyse the interactions within - and between - heritage and gender.