30 research outputs found
Heritage and decoloniality: Reflections from Sri Lanka - a conversation
This is the author accepted manuscript.We see from other contributions to this collection how issues of colonialism and
decoloniality in different societies and regions of the world shape and reshape heritage
meanings and the role that is played by differing levels of knowledge and authority—local,
communal, institutional, legal, and national—in directing and redirecting perceptions of
heritage. Many of the contributions share the backdrop of settler colonialism in the Americas
and find solidarity at the intersection of heritage, land rights, and (dis)possession. In South
Asia, it is external, or exogenous, colonialism; the exploitation of local people; and extraction
of resources by an outside power for the wealth and privilege of the colonizers (Tuck and
Yang, 2012) that characterize society and heritage. Here we deal specifically with Sri Lanka,
an island with a long, rich, and multifaceted history that has in the last half-century
experienced a brutal civil war and now lives in an uneasy and unresolved peace.
Taking inspiration from conversations that emerged during the meeting in Geneva, we have
here recorded a three-way conversation that developed its own trajectories as we explored our
own places in the heritage-coloniality dynamic of Sri Lanka and then the places where we
found the contentions of heritage-coloniality impinging on the state of the island and its
communities today. It is interesting that our conversation also alighted on the perception of a
new Chinese colonialism, unknowingly picking up threads from the contribution of Florence
Graezer Bideau and Pascale Bugnon in this special section. To retain the spontaneity and
authenticity of our conversation in December 2022, the text is largely unedited. For anyone
familiar with Sri Lanka today, the conversation as an event is as valuable as what is being
said, and we hope this opens doors to more cross-community conversations
Localising Heritage: archaeologies of the recent past in post-war Jaffna, Sri Lanka
This is the author accepted manuscript.In many countries archaeology is generally viewed as a largely positive endeavour; a subject that
enhances society through new discoveries in the field and new insights into the past. This is not the
case, however, in the north and east of Sri Lanka where archaeology is viewed, at best, as irrelevant
to the lives of the majority of people or, at worst, as a weapon used against them. In this paper we
outline the development of a new archaeology and heritage project as a response to this predicament,
with a focus on a collaborative workshop held in Jaffna in 2022, hosted by the Arts Faculty of the
University of Jaffna. This workshop was used to test the potential for archaeology and heritage to
foster post-war healing by supporting affirmation of identity, sense of place and community. It also
demonstrated archaeological fieldwork as collaborative activity that does not require specialist
training, and brings people together in the field, identifying and recording materials and memories.
This workshop enabled conversations between UK and Jaffna participants about fundamentally re thinking what archaeology and heritage might mean, how they can be practiced, and how the results
might be used for social good in Sri Lanka.Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC)GCRF Facilitation Fund (Exeter
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