Author
Keywords
Abstract

In this article, I propose to view the acts of production behind tourist art as indicators of adaptation strategies paramount to innovation and cultural reprocessing. From this perspective, I examine the principle of materiality associated with UNESCO selection criteria, including a spatial-temporal conception that rejects the contemporaneity between objects and their acts of production. The Malian state s “heritage foundation” excludes tourist art carvers on the basis of their economic survival strategies and marks of identity. In an opposite perspective, the principle of corporality includes a social perspective on cultural heritage in which the human body is viewed as a receptacle of the capital of “social relations of work,” conveying a social aesthetic in which iconographic innovation is the outcome of economic precariousness and hierarchical relations.

Year of Publication
2012
Journal
Africa Today
Volume
58
Number
3
Number of Pages
41-56
Date Published
mar
Publication Language
English
ISSN Number
00019887
URL
http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2979/africatoday.58.3.41
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