National heritage and nationalist narrative in contemporary Thailand : an essay on culture and politics
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Peleggi, Maurizio
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Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University
Abstract
In contemporary perception vestiges of the past are like endangered
species: the ones still surviving have to be protected to avoid their possible
disappearance. Hence, similar to animals under threat of extinction, relics
are kept in enclosed areas that safeguard and allow their display while lists
of crumbling monuments are drawn up to establish a Noah's Ark of
cultural remnants. Removed from daily vicissitudes, heritage becomes an
essential element of "extra-ordinary" life, holiday time, when visiting a
museum or an exhibition is a more likely event. Yet, just as captivity
changes animal behaviour, the survival of heritage in "cultural zoos" alters
its character and value. Furthermore, memory, which allows people to
relive their history, never has an idealistic nature. It always is a function of
present and particular perspectives, at the personal as well as at the
collective level. Nevertheless, conservation of ruins is nowadays
implemented with global aims under the formula of World Heritage, a list
of natural and cultural sites to maintain for future generations. World
Heritage has UNESCO as its great sponsor and national governments as its
main executor. It is thus clear that, despite the stress on antiquity from
which relics emerge and the posterity for which they are preserved, the
establishment and consumption of a world cultural heritage is a social and
cultural phenomenon which matters essentially in the present.
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