|
|||||||
ÀâòîÀâòîìàòèçàöèÿÀðõèòåêòóðàÀñòðîíîìèÿÀóäèòÁèîëîãèÿÁóõãàëòåðèÿÂîåííîå äåëîÃåíåòèêàÃåîãðàôèÿÃåîëîãèÿÃîñóäàðñòâîÄîìÄðóãîåÆóðíàëèñòèêà è ÑÌÈÈçîáðåòàòåëüñòâîÈíîñòðàííûå ÿçûêèÈíôîðìàòèêàÈñêóññòâîÈñòîðèÿÊîìïüþòåðûÊóëèíàðèÿÊóëüòóðàËåêñèêîëîãèÿËèòåðàòóðàËîãèêàÌàðêåòèíãÌàòåìàòèêàÌàøèíîñòðîåíèåÌåäèöèíàÌåíåäæìåíòÌåòàëëû è ÑâàðêàÌåõàíèêàÌóçûêàÍàñåëåíèåÎáðàçîâàíèåÎõðàíà áåçîïàñíîñòè æèçíèÎõðàíà ÒðóäàÏåäàãîãèêàÏîëèòèêàÏðàâîÏðèáîðîñòðîåíèåÏðîãðàììèðîâàíèåÏðîèçâîäñòâîÏðîìûøëåííîñòüÏñèõîëîãèÿÐàäèîÐåãèëèÿÑâÿçüÑîöèîëîãèÿÑïîðòÑòàíäàðòèçàöèÿÑòðîèòåëüñòâîÒåõíîëîãèèÒîðãîâëÿÒóðèçìÔèçèêàÔèçèîëîãèÿÔèëîñîôèÿÔèíàíñûÕèìèÿÕîçÿéñòâîÖåííîîáðàçîâàíèå×åð÷åíèåÝêîëîãèÿÝêîíîìåòðèêàÝêîíîìèêàÝëåêòðîíèêàÞðèñïóíäåíêöèÿ |
Heritage
Thus far, this study has examined the recovery of the winter nianhua markets in Mianzhu, along with its evolving repertoire of ritual activities tied to both nianhua production and consumption. I have only touched on the role of the state-led nianhua revival as a catalyst for these developments and as a source of folk art discourses that tend to privilege historic nianhua over its contemporary incarnations. In this final chapter, I examine more closely Mianzhu’s state-led nianhua revival and its use of heritage discourses to launch a folk art industry based on the reproduction of historic nianhua. Having laid out a preliminary framework for discussing the many ritual practices tied to nianhua, it is now possible to critique how the state-led nianhua revival has approached the issue of ritual practices, including its stated intent to preserve and protect nianhua’s “intangible cultural heritage” (ICH) . While official heritage discourses of the 1980s focused primarily on the tangible assets of heritage, including monuments, artifacts, and sites, by the mid-1990s there was growing national interest in expanding these activities to include the intangible assets of heritage, especially the ephemeral and embodied repertoires of traditional music, dance, and theater. These developments were directly influenced by ongoing collaborations between Chinese authorities and the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), a relationship that blossomed during the 1990s and onward.277 277 In China, UNESCO’s interest in ICH was already making a nationwide impact in 1992, when its Cultural Heritage Centre for Asia and the Pacific launched the “Memory of the World and China’s Traditional Music Sound Archives.” For a historical overview of heritage revival activities in China and UNESCO’s involvement see Geremie Barme, ed. "A Tale of Two Lists: An Examination of the New Lists of Intangible Cultural Properties," China Heritage Newsletter 7 (2006), accessed November 3, 2011, http://www.chinaheritagenewsletter.org/features.php?searchterm=007_twolists.inc&issue=007. As a result, significant state funds and resources have been poured into building a centralized heritage bureaucracy in China, staffed with skilled heritage workers that UNESCO helped train. Sinologist Geremie Barme, who has followed these developments closely, has observed the rapid growth and immense scale of heritage protection activities in China, which is organizing “one of the world’s largest forces of conservationists and conservation bureaucrats.”278 In 2001, UNESCO’s director general released its “Proclamation of Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity” to raise awareness of its changing strategies towards heritage protection. In response to harsh critiques that ephemeral forms of cultural knowledge were seriously threatened by the objectification, isolation, and exoticization of tangible forms of heritage, UNESCO revised its position to specifically acknowledge embodied forms of cultural activity with the following definition for oral and intangible heritage: People’s learned processes along with the knowledge, skills and creativity that inform and are developed by them, the products they create and the resources, spaces, and other aspects of social and natural context necessary to their sustainability; these processes provide living communities with a sense of continuity with previous generations and are important to cultural identity, as well as to the safeguarding of cultural diversity and creativity of humanity.279 The proclamation solidified UNESCO’s position on a controversial issue and renewed its agenda of evaluating and listing the world’s oral and intangible heritage. Since then, China’s heritage bureaucracy has aggressively pursued recognition on UNESCO’s 278Barme, “Tale of Two,” 2006. 279 “2001 UNESCO Proclamation of Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity: Guide for the Presentation of Candidature Files, Article 3: ‘Definition,’” accessed October 15, 2011, http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0012/001246/124628eo.pdf. prestigious list of ICH, setting off a nationwide race to identify and publicize regional forms of ICH. As a highly sought after goal, UNESCO recognition brings both political and economic capital on the world stage, glorifying China’s geopolitical influence as a cultural nation while attracting foreign investment for heritage management, development, and tourism. Thus far, the historic nianhua centers in China have yet to gain a spot on UNESCO’s list, although twelve centers including Mianzhu, Sichuan did make the race to be included in an internal list of ICH issued by China’s State Council in 2006. 280 The list includes ten categories of ICH, including folk literature, folk music, folk dance, traditional drama, storytelling, acrobatics and sports, folk art, handicraft skills, traditional medicine, and folk customs. The twelve historic print centers are listed under the category of “folk art,” under the title of “woodblock printed nianhua” . This list is significant because it resituates nianhua as form of intangible rather than tangible heritage, and because it specifies woodblock printing as the particular type of knowledge it seeks to protect. This shift is mirrored in the state-led revival activities in Mianzhu, which were initially focused on the tangible assets of nianhua heritage, such as the collection and exhibition of nianhua artifacts as well as the building of a Mianzhu Nianhua Museum in 1994 to house the state’s nianhua collection. By the early 2000s however, local and provincial authorities had shifted their efforts towards rebuilding Mianzhu into a folk art heritage attraction that would include an entire themed Nianhua Village built with traditional architectural forms and a combination of restaurants, nianhua shops, living 280 China Cultural Relics News, “Representative Items of National Intangible Cultural Heritage” , news release issued by the State Council, January 6, 2006, accessed October 15, 2011, http://www.chinaheritagequarterly.org/007/features/501_firstlist.pdf. spaces, farm plots, gardens, and pavilions. State funds were also dedicated to an annual Nianhua Festival that would include a changing line-up of cultural performances based on themes drawn from historic nianhua. In taking up the discourses around ICH, state agencies moved beyond merely collecting and exhibiting historic nianhua to the building of historic nianhua sites and the staging of historic activities at those sites. Instead of marketing the nianhua object, the revival moved towards marketing the intangible nianhua experience. In response to these developments, local nianhua workshops, artists, entrepreneurs, and visitors have also played an important role in either validating or rejecting the state’s carefully orchestrated presentations of nianhua heritage. Many workshops and independent artists have asserted their own claims to nianhua heritage, playing off and countering the state-led projects in creative and often unexpected ways. The critical scholarship in heritage studies mirrors this shift in that scholars have moved away from theorizing heritage as a set of tangible assets (such as objects, sites, and monuments) and towards critiquing it as a “cultural process” and socially constructed concept driven by a variety of competing discourses and practices. In the opening line of Uses of Heritage, leading heritage studies scholar Laurajane Smith states provocatively, “There is, really no such thing as heritage.” Smith uses this statement to expose and to argue against the naturalizing effects of heritage, which is identified with “ ‘old,’ grand, monumental and aesthetically pleasing sites, buildings, places, and artifacts.” Instead, Smith draws attention to the role of heritage as an abstract form of “hegemonic discourse” that validates certain practices and performances while obscuring and undermining others.281 Instead of taking for granted the material reality of heritage, Smith argues that the tangible assets of heritage are only known by the cultural values assigned 281 Laurajane Smith, The Uses of Heritage (London: Routledge, 2006), 11. to them in the first place. Thus in an effort to critique and deconstruct the focus on materiality in hegemonic heritage discourses, Smith sets forth an alternate conception of heritage that is established through cultural processes such as “memory, performance, identity, intangibility, dissonance, and place.”282 Smith’s approach reflects a larger debate concerning the “dematerialization of culture,” especially in museums and heritage sites that are moving towards more interactive and performative strategies of portraying the past and its tangible remains.283 Performance and heritage studies scholar Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett has argued for a view of heritage that is not about the tangible objects or sites of objects: “I wish to underscore that heritage is not lost and found, stolen and reclaimed. It is a mode of cultural production in the present that has recourse to the past.”284 Like Smith, Kirshenblatt-Gimblett stresses the ways in which heritage discourses assign new meanings: “The heritage industry is a new mode of cultural production and it produces something new.”285 However, this shift towards interpreting heritage as a cultural process often relegates objects and sites to a passive role, where meaning is simply projected or imposed by human activities, where “tangible heritage, without intangible heritage, is a mere husk or inert matter. As for intangible heritage, it is not only embodied but also inseparable from the material and social worlds of persons.”286 In an effort to move away 282 Ibid., i. 283 Anthony Jackson and Jenny Kidd, introduction to Performing Heritage: Research, Practice and Innovation in Museum Theatre and Live Interpretation, ed. Anthony Jackson and Jenny Kidd (Manchester University Press, 2011), 1-7. 284 Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, Destination Culture: Tourism, Museums, and Heritage (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998), 150. 285 Ibid., 150. 286 Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, “Intangible Heritage as Metacultural Production,” Museum International 56, no. 1-2 (2004), 221-222. from attributing intrinsic value to the objects of heritage, the move towards dematerialization swings to the other extreme of treating tangible objects as raw and “inert matter” at the mercy of heritage discourses. Reflecting the life/matter binary that informs much of Western scholarship, the debate around tangible versus intangible heritage must be approached with caution, especially with regard to how objects are either materialized or dematerialized in scholarly discourses aimed at redefining heritage. Although the critical scholarship is useful in exposing heritage as cultural processes, I will argue that the contested objects taken up in heritage discourses need to be examined within the specific cultural discourses and situated practices that shape their meaning. Thus in critiquing the state-led nianhua revival in Mianzhu, I will argue for the need to keep in mind the evolving relationships between nianhua and the embodied practices that continually shape their meaning. The danger in dematerializing the notion of heritage is that it risks losing sight of the dialectical interactions between objects and practices that undergird and legitimize both the state’s institutional claim to heritage as well as the counter claims that arise in response. In the following sections, I will focus on the central role of historic nianhua in supporting a wide range of competing claims to nianhua heritage. I am primarily interested in how these claims are invested with power and legitimacy through specific modes of engagement with historic nianhua, especially the reproduction and recirculation of these works in the marketplace. I will focus on the critical role of historic nianhua in supporting large state funded projects such as the Mianzhu Nianhua Museum, the Nianhua Village, and the Nianhua Festival. I will also address the range of critical responses and counter-activities that developed as a result of these heritage-building projects, including the different claims to heritage advanced by local printshops, entrepreneurs, and independent folk artists who are also keen on appropriating the power of historic nianhua. Ïîèñê ïî ñàéòó: |
Âñå ìàòåðèàëû ïðåäñòàâëåííûå íà ñàéòå èñêëþ÷èòåëüíî ñ öåëüþ îçíàêîìëåíèÿ ÷èòàòåëÿìè è íå ïðåñëåäóþò êîììåð÷åñêèõ öåëåé èëè íàðóøåíèå àâòîðñêèõ ïðàâ. Ñòóäàëë.Îðã (0.02 ñåê.) |