Dialogical heritage practices at Kahalu’u bay and Keauhou, Hawaiʻi island

IF 2 1区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY International Journal of Heritage Studies Pub Date : 2023-02-16 DOI:10.1080/13527258.2023.2176350
J. Christie
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Abstract

ABSTRACT This essay critically analyzes cultural and natural heritage of Kahalu`u Bay and Keauhou on the west coast of Hawai`i Island, which prospered as the royal centre from roughly A.D.1500 through the 1800s, through the lens of Hawaiian `ike (acceptance of knowledge diversity). Knowledge sources used here are archaeological reports, oral narratives, literature by contemporary Hawaiian scholars, organised into mo`olelo (Hawaiian story, oral history), as well as interviews. Similar to `ike, mo`olelo are alive and adapt to changing times, as seen here through a dialogical model of heritage and ontology of connectivity between multiple stakeholders, human and other-than-human. The analysis focuses on two case scenarios which open hybrid fora between human, Indigenous, land-based, institutional, and business agents. Although this heritage landscape has been sculpted and reordered by the tourism industry and remains entrapped in the late capitalist system, the framework of dialogical heritage brings the potential of co-production of new knowledge as well as new ways of thinking about heritage shaping and thus provides alternatives to Western colonial extractive practices.
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夏威夷夏威夷岛Kahalu 'u湾和Keauhou的对话遗产实践
本文从夏威夷人的视角(对知识多样性的接受),批判性地分析了夏威夷岛西海岸的Kahalu ' u湾和Keauhou的文化和自然遗产。大约从公元1500年到1800年,夏威夷岛作为皇家中心繁荣发展。这里使用的知识来源包括考古报告、口头叙述、当代夏威夷学者的文学作品,这些作品被组织成mo 'olelo(夏威夷故事、口述历史),以及采访。与“喜欢”类似,mo’olelo是有生命的,并适应着不断变化的时代,这一点可以从这里看到,这是一种遗产的对话模式,以及人类和非人类的多个利益相关者之间的联系本体。分析的重点是两个案例场景,这两个场景打开了人类、土著、陆地、机构和商业代理之间的混合论坛。尽管这个遗产景观已经被旅游业雕刻和重新排序,并且仍然被后期资本主义制度所束缚,但对话遗产的框架带来了共同生产新知识的潜力,以及关于遗产塑造的新思维方式,从而为西方殖民主义的采掘实践提供了替代方案。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
11.10%
发文量
56
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Heritage Studies ( IJHS ) is the interdisciplinary academic, refereed journal for scholars and practitioners with a common interest in heritage. The Journal encourages debate over the nature and meaning of heritage as well as its links to memory, identities and place. Articles may include issues emerging from Heritage Studies, Museum Studies, History, Tourism Studies, Sociology, Anthropology, Memory Studies, Cultural Geography, Law, Cultural Studies, and Interpretation and Design.
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