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Resumen

This article explores the concept of community as a place which engages with self and other in safeguarding IntangibLe CuLtural Heritage. By observing a scheme piloted by the Japanese government to promote traditional craft industries, I will show how a cultural form and its practitioners are attached to a particular place, and how the government s support of traditional craft products invites outside evaluation and consumption of those products. The case study of a traditional woven textile, Kijoka-no-Basho-fu, produced in Okinawa Prefecture, suggests that community allows practitioners to embody the time-space configuration of their work and also frames the public perception of this work as tradition . Cultural heritage within a community creates a site where one may recognise one s self through one s experience of outside values and social change.

Año de publicación
2013
Revista académica
International Journal of Intangible Heritage
Volumen
8
Número de páginas
135-152
Idioma de edición
English
Numero ISSN
19753586 (ISSN)
URL
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84891129994&partnerID=40&md5=dcc9040be9384aadf80c6aebc9221d69
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