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From:
"Noel B. Salazar" <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Museum discussion list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sat, 3 Jan 2009 16:42:10 +0100
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*** Apologies for cross-posting ***

CALL FOR PAPERS
Imagineering the past: The (mis)uses of anthropology and archaeology in 
tourism
ASA09 - Anthropological and archaeological imaginations: Past, present 
and future
University of Bristol, UK, 6-9 April 2009

Organizer: Dr. Noel B. Salazar (University of Leuven)

In a bid to obtain a piece of the lucrative global tourism pie, 
destinations worldwide are trying to play up their local 
distinctiveness. This is sometimes done by borrowing from traditional 
ethnology an ontological and essentialist vision of exotic cultures, 
conceived as static entities with clearly defined characteristics. Ideas 
of old-style colonial anthropology and archaeology – objectifying, 
reifying, homogenizing, and naturalizing peoples – are widely (mis)used 
in international tourism by individuals and organizations staking claims 
of identity and cultural belonging on imagined notions of place and 
locality. Ironically, this is happening at a time when anthropologists 
and archaeologists alike prefer more constructivist approaches to human 
heritage, taking it for granted that cultures and societies were never 
passive, bounded and homogeneous entities.
Of course, academic writings (often outdated ones) are only one source 
of inspiration that shape tourism imaginaries of peoples and places, but 
they are an underestimated and under-researched one. While there is a 
growing literature on how fieldworkers engage with tourism, at their 
research sites or on a theoretical level, there has been little 
systematic investigation of how archaeological and anthropological 
knowledge is (mis)used, ŕ la carte, by tourism stakeholders to produce 
easily sellable interpretations of heritage (and, in the process, 
transforming local peoples’ lives). This panel presents empirical case 
studies that critically analyse which aspects of the two disciplines are 
used in tourism to create nostalgic essentializing imagery of so-called 
authentic traditions and cultures and what the ascribed and 
self-identified roles and responsibilities of scholars are in these 
processes.

If you are interested in participating, please go to the conference 
website (http://www.nomadit.co.uk/asa/asa09/panels.php5?PanelID=532), 
click the ‘Propose a paper’ link and follow the instructions.
Note that the deadline is February 6.
General instructions about submitting abstracts: 
http://www.theasa.org/conferences/asa09/papers.htm
More information about the conference in general: 
http://www.theasa.org/conferences/asa09/
High-quality papers will be selected for publication in an edited volume.

--
Dr. Noel B. SALAZAR obtained his PhD from the Department of Anthropology 
at the University of Pennsylvania (USA). He is currently a Postdoctoral 
Fellow at the Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Leuven (Belgium) 
and a Visiting Research Associate at the Centre for Tourism and Cultural 
Change, Leeds Metropolitan University (UK). His research interests 
include anthropologies of mobility, the local-to-global nexus, 
discourses and imaginaries of Otherness, culture brokering and contact, 
and public interest ethnographies. More information about his projects 
and publications is available online:
http://nbsalazar.flyurl.net/
-- 
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Noel B. Salazar, PhD
Marie Curie Fellow (EC, FP7-PEOPLE-IRG)
Fellow of the Research Foundation - Flanders (FWO)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
IMMRC, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Leuven
Parkstraat 45 (AV 03.06), bus 3615, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium
Tel: +32 (0)475 53.73.13, Fax +32 (0)16 32.59.02
http://kuleuven.academia.edu/NoelBSalazar
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Disclaimer: http://www.kuleuven.be/cwis/email_disclaimer.htm

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