01629nas a2200181 4500000000100000000000100001000000100002008004100003653002100044653002500065653003300090100001600123245005900139300001000198490000900208520121000217022002001427 2011 d10aChinese medicine10aHeritage designation10aIntangible cultural heritage1 aF. Obringer00aChinese medicine and the enticement of heritage status a15-220 v20113 aIn November 2010, UNESCO included "Acupuncture and moxibustion as part of Chinese traditional medicine" on its Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Already in 2006, a national list of oral and intangible masterpieces of heritage was drawn up. Nine of them pertained to medicine and traditional pharmacopoeia. Since then, two other national lists have been compiled, containing medical elements. This article analyses the challenges of Chinese medicine s "patrimonialisation" by retracing the discipline s recent as well as much older history. Contents of different lists are examined in this perspective. Chinese medicine finds itself in a paradoxical situation, compared in practical terms with biomedicine, in perpetual reclassification, and held up for good or for bad reasons. Its inclusion in the cultural heritage list highlights many problematic issues, such as master-disciple transmission, vague teaching methods, questions as to the scientific nature or otherwise of its practices, and the industrialisation of its pharmacopoeia. In conclusion, questions may be raised over the link between protection and denaturation throughout the heritage designation process. a20703449 (ISSN)