Auteur
Mots-clés
Résumé

This article directly responds to an article authored by Iacono and Brown published in Dance Research (2016), and considers issues emerging since its publication. The core topic is the UNESCO Convention from 2003, and in our view, criticism in the 2016 article is based on misinterpretation. We address the claims that the Convention is marked by binarism and provide in-depth background for the concept of intangible cultural heritage. We also caution against using the biomorphic term living cultural heritage as its application stands in an ambiguous relation toward essentialist, organicist and totalitarian ideologies. We end with a discussion on attitudes toward globalisation and the concept of innovation. These, we argue, have profound implications for recent discussions on decolonisation.

Année de publication
2021
Journal
Dance Research
Volume
39
Nombre
2
Nombre de pages
247-263
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Date de publication
nov
Langue de publication
English
ISSN Number
02642875 (ISSN)
URL
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85119291686&doi=10.3366%2fdrs.2021.0345&partnerID=40&md5=463131e0cf653330efc1234e4f3780f2
DOI
10.3366/drs.2021.0345
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