首页> 外文OA文献 >Memory, Performance, Identity:Making Personal History, Making Meaning:A Critical Analysis of an Independent Heritage Initiative at Duart House, Havelock North
【2h】

Memory, Performance, Identity:Making Personal History, Making Meaning:A Critical Analysis of an Independent Heritage Initiative at Duart House, Havelock North

机译:内存,性能,身份:创造个人历史,创造意义:对哈夫洛克北部杜阿尔特故居的独立遗产倡议的批判性分析

摘要

On a small ridge overlooking Havelock North and parts of the Heretaunga Plains to the west, a Victorian homestead known as Duart House was rescued from neglect by a local community group in 1985. The group became known as the Duart House Society (DHS) who formed to care for its maintenance and promote it to the public for social and cultural activity; however, in managing local heritage, the DHS have done so according to their own priorities and needs. This dissertation examines a case study of an independent heritage initiative and considers the question of how we might understand the ways in which people engage and respond to heritage, and why these activities should be of interest to professionals in favour of democratising museums and heritage. There is currently no research on independent heritage activity in New Zealand and international studies have also been largely neglected.A range of historical, empirical and theoretical approaches are incorporated in this research, including interviews, observation, questionnaires, primary and secondary resources, to generate a diverse range of data reflecting the wide range of factors that influence the central question of this research. By utilising Duart House of Havelock North as a case study, in conjunction with theories of intangible heritage, history and memory, the research moves beyond the 'official' museum and heritage sector to draw attention to the exclusive nature of people's sense of the past in New Zealand. This dissertation also addresses an issue that has been under-theorised in the existing literature of museum and heritage studies, namely that of individual memory, and the importance of objects and places to keep memory alive in the face of change.The research not only provides an in-depth study of one example of local heritage, but suggests an awareness of heritage as personal opposed to collective, and something which is 'performed' in multiple layers rather than just a physical place or 'thing'. It concludes that heritage is a far more complex process between people, place and memory than the literature on the subject claims, which poses a problem for museums who want to be 'all things to all people' and one that is not easily resolved. The research proposes a new direction for museums that is less concerned with 'truth' and more comfortable with 'open-ended exploration', 'wonder' and 'imagination'. This dissertation therefore serves as a critical resource to prompt further debate about the challenge of establishing closer relationships between museums, heritage and communities.
机译:1985年,在俯瞰哈夫洛克北部和西部赫雷通加平原一部分的小山脊上,一个当地人社区从一个疏忽中救出了一个维多利亚时代的宅邸,称为Duart House。该团体后来被称为Duart House Society(DHS)。照顾它的维护并向公众宣传以进行社会和文化活动;但是,在管理当地遗产时,国土安全部是根据自己的优先事项和需求来进行的。本文研究了一项关于独立遗产计划的案例研究,并考虑了以下问题:我们如何理解人们参与和回应遗产的方式,以及为什么这些活动应引起专业人员的兴趣,以使博物馆和遗产民主化。目前在新西兰还没有关于独立遗产活动的研究,国际研究也被很大程度上忽略了。本研究采用了一系列的历史,经验和理论方法,包括访谈,观察,问卷,主要和次要资源。各种各样的数据反映了影响该研究中心问题的各种因素。通过将Havelock North的Duart House用作案例研究,结合非物质遗产,历史和记忆理论,该研究超越了“官方”博物馆和遗产领域,从而吸引了人们对过去历史感的独特认识。新西兰。本论文还解决了博物馆和遗产研究的现有文献中理论不足的问题,即个人记忆的问题以及在变化中保持记忆活着的物体和场所的重要性。该研究不仅提供了对本地遗产的一个示例进行的深入研究,但表明人们对遗产的认识是个人而不是集体,这是在多层中“执行”的,而不仅仅是物理场所或“事物”。得出的结论是,遗产是人,地方和记忆之间的过程,远比有关主题主张的文献复杂得多,这对想要成为“所有人的万物”且难以解决的博物馆构成了问题。该研究为博物馆提出了一个新的方向,该方向不再关注“真相”,而更喜欢“开放式探索”,“奇观”和“想象”。因此,本论文是促进进一步辩论在博物馆,遗产和社区之间建立更紧密关系的挑战的重要资源。

著录项

  • 作者

    Mastemaker Lorie A.;

  • 作者单位
  • 年度 2010
  • 总页数
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 en_NZ
  • 中图分类

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 专利

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号