Autor
Palabras clave
Resumen

A “fever” of heritage registration (patrimonialización) is raging at multiple levels of Bolivian society. Under the pro-indigenous government of Evo Morales, many laws have moved specific cultural expressions into legal framings as intangible cultural heritage. In part, this booming interest in heritage may be related to desires to capitalize on cultures, to support cultural rights claims, and/or some combination of these economic and cultural rights explanations. To help account for specific local uptakes of heritage assemblages and for differences between the levels of heritage dispute, however, this article suggests also considering a “heritage otherwise” perspective. Rather than attributing local conflicts over heritage “cradle” declarations entirely to the impact of neoliberalism and UNESCO’s processes, this article explores them in terms of the dynamics of origin politics and a preference for cacophonous modes of musical performance. Such dynamics and “cacophonous relations,” it is argued, are more about reproducing worlds than parceling them into new forms of property.

Año de publicación
2018
Revista académica
Anthropological Quarterly
Volumen
91
Número
4
Número de páginas
1329-1363
Publisher: Institute for Ethnographic Research
Idioma de edición
English
Numero ISSN
00035491 (ISSN)
URL
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85062811991&doi=10.1353%2fanq.2018.0067&partnerID=40&md5=9ff065daf8d4362d97a4c2caa885ce4c
DOI
10.1353/anq.2018.0067
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