About the Project

 

Research

What unites diverse, and at times ephemeral, communities in enabling or hindering heritage? From our perspective, the danger to the world’s heritage is not primarily war, terrorism, environmental change, tourism, or digitalization. Instead, it is the loss of interest or the inability to form and sustain solidarity across differences. The research project “Heritage as Placemaking: The Politics of Solidarity and Erasure in South Asia” (HaP), explores what enables or stymies heritage and the potential of heritagisation to ignite solidaric formations. The cultural dimension of the Sustainable Development Goals lies in the commitment of people to work together, to make place. Likewise, living heritage requires the individuals’ commitment to engage, collaborate, and invest in the joint cultural future of communities. This project is critical of the role of external authorities and experts in the process of sustaining cultural heritage and instead invests in those who identify with heritage, who uphold and maintain its existence. The goal of HaP is to investigate precisely what unites people and what therefore enables them to create heritage as placemaking. 

We acknowledge that many heritage sites in South Asia are decaying due to rapid urbanisation and changing living conditions, as well as labour migration and climate change. The project explores how local and transregional agents use heritage as placemaking to fight eviction, road widening, or real estate development. We see heritage as becoming the political argument over which different stakeholders, cultural owners, and audiences negotiate the future.

The research team, based in Heidelberg, Kathmandu, London, and Colombo (formerly Delhi), explore how people—through forming temporary and/or longer-lasting groups of solidarity—decide over the formation, preservation, decay, and erasure of heritage. We ask: What informs decision-making when heritage is dynamically framed through engagement with the site itself, as well as with bureaucracy and governance? We question authorities in the discourses of development and advocate for the decolonisation of the heritage discourse to give local voices the weight they deserve, and we find social aesthetics and contemporary uses of the archive inspiring locations for fresh thought. Our study requires us to relationally approach affective and performative imaginaries and practices where nation-building and area-making are invoked in ways that transgress compartmentalized notions of ‘territory’ and ‘place’.

This project contributes to a critical reflection of heritage production beyond developmentalism and preservation. It is situated in the fields of critical heritage studies, new area studies, and transcultural urbanisation studies. The theoretical implications of our empirical studies will lead to a new model of enabling heritage through place-making.


Four theoretical strands

Ruins abandoned in a forest, revived folk dances, infrastructure built around temples to facilitate pilgrims, palaces, and vernacular sites forgotten and contested in a city: at any time in history, it is people’s joint investment in what they declare as worthy of being preserved and cared for that creates, reimagines, or hampers heritage. Heritage as Placemaking seeks to understand the preconditions for heritage, why and under which social and political circumstances heritage becomes a catalyst that enables the social cohesion that sustains it. To this end, our project focuses on four theoretical pillars: bureaucracy, decolonization, commoning, and erasure.

These themes are addressed within a relational and comparative case study approach, with projects in various field sites—three in India, six in Nepal. Each of our eight research projects engages with multiple theoretical strands, and each of the four years of the project focuses on the theoretical development of one of these guiding concepts. Essential to each is their ability to function both separately and simultaneously as tools of analysis: heritage placemaking can be at once understood as a project of decolonization, a condition for commoning, entangled with bureaucracy, and a potential politics of erasure.