Tracing Intangible Cultural Migrant Heritage in the UK (International Perspectives on Migration)

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Tracing Intangible Cultural Migrant Heritage in the UK (International Perspectives on Migration)

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 371 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9783032004710

Description

This book explores the role of intangible cultural heritage (ICH) among migrant communities in the UK. It examines how diverse cultural practices, from life celebrations to death commemorations, have travelled with communities, evolved in new settings, and taken root in the UK. Through case studies from different community groups, spanning oral traditions, performing arts, social customs, and craftsmanship, this book illustrates how ICH becomes a vital part of everyday life, identity, and belonging within the UK s multicultural mosaic.

In a landscape often dominated by narratives of immigration pressures and societal division, this book shifts the focus and reclaims the narrative, illuminating the cultural knowledge, creativity, and practices that migrants bring. It highlights the significant yet frequently undervalued contributions of migrant ICH to the UK s evolving socio-cultural fabric. This timely work emerges amidst crucial debates surrounding UK heritage policy, including the recent ratification of UNESCO s 2003 Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage and the growing movement to establish national ICH inventories, offering a critical and much-needed perspective.

This powerful, interdisciplinary collection brings together the voices of scholars, artists, and heritage professionals, many of whom are migrants themselves. Through a combination of personal experience and academic insight, contributors explore how ICH is safeguarded, lived, and transformed in the UK. From South Asian Bhangra to Syrian herbal remedies, Polish parenting traditions to Irish storytelling, this book captures a wide spectrum of cultural expressions that span continents and communities. It brings visibility to both formally recognised forms of ICH and the everyday rituals that rarely make headlines but profoundly shape identity and belonging.

By foregrounding these voices and experiences, this book aims to inspire the development of inclusive ICH inventories and to champion the recognition of migrant heritage not as peripheral, but as central to the UK s shared cultural landscape.

Whether you are a researcher, policymaker, community organiser, or simply someone curious about the human stories behind migration, this book invites you to view cultural heritage not as something fixed, but as something living, shared, and sustained across generations and borders.

Chapter 1. Introduction.- Chapter 2. Whose Heritage? Ethics, Frameworks, and the UK s ICH Landscape.- PART I: Ideologies and Identities: Migration, Belonging, and the Negotiation of Intangible Cultural Heritage.- Chapter 3. Living Heritage: Migrant and Local Perspectives on Identity and Change in the UK.- Chapter 4. Securing Values: Religious Tolerance and The British-Turkish Community.- Chapter 5. The Impact of Collective Capital on Construction of Migrant Identity: The Case of Polish Mothers in the UK.- PART II: Celebrating Heritage: Social Practices, Rituals, and Festive Traditions in Migrant Lives.- Chapter 6. Cultural Heritage In/As Performance: the development of British Bhangra and the Belfast Mela.- Chapter 7. New Year Festivities Away from Home: Nowruz as a Celebration of Memory and Belonging.- Chapter 8. Memories of Snow. Intangible Cultural Dimensions of Death and Legacy.- PART III: Creative Expressions: Migrant Heritage through Literature and Visual Culture.- Chapter 9. Unsettled Writing: Tracing the Literary Heritage of Irish Travellers.- Chapter 10. Near This Place: The Liverpool Irish Famine Trail in Visual Art.- Chapter 11. What is photo-entanglement? Re-Imagining Romanian Culture from Afar Through Photographic Images of Myths, Feelings and Personal Stories.- PART IV: Heritage in Flux: Sustaining Identity Amid Migration and Change.- Chapter 12. Healing Across Generations: The Role of Traditional Syrian Medicine in Shaping Modern Practice.- Chapter 13. Home Atmosphere Transmission through Intangible and Material Culture: Saudis Living in the UK.- Chapter 14. Displaced Knowledge: Safeguarding Migrant Intangible Cultural Heritage in the Context of Climate Change.

Dr. Ataa Alsalloum is a Senior Lecturer in Architecture and Urban Heritage at the University of Liverpool, School of Architecture (LSA). Originally trained as an architect, she worked in private practice and taught at universities in Syria before settling in the UK. She holds a PhD in Cultural Heritage Studies from the LSA, and her work brings together international heritage policy and community-led approaches to sustainable heritage management, with a strong emphasis on intangible cultural heritage (ICH). Ataa is the founder and director of the MA in Sustainable Heritage Management at the LSA, a programme that has been fully recognised by the Institute of Historic Building Conservation (IHBC). Beyond the university, she serves as a Trustee of ICOMOS-UK, where she leads on education and training, and contributes to the Intangible Cultural Heritage Committee. Her research explores how heritage shapes identity, belonging, and the experience of home, particularly for migrant and minority communities in the UK. She has led several heritage projects both nationally and internationally, always with a focus on inclusion, lived experience, and cultural continuity.


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