Losing culture : nostalgia, heritage, and our accelerated times /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Berliner, David, author.
Uniform title:Perdre sa culture. English
Imprint:New Brunswick, New Jersey : Rutgers University Press, [2020]
Description:vii, 148 pages ; 22 cm
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12406071
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Horsfall, Dominic, translator.
ISBN:9781978815353
1978815352
9781978815360
1978815360
9781978815377
Notes:Translation of: Perdre sa culture.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary:"Many people talk about how we're "losing everything"--our culture, our traditions, our roots. As calls for cultural preservation multiply across the globe, anthropology teaches us that there are different ways of thinking about loss, memory, transmissions, and heritage. In this short book, translated from the French for the first time, David Berliner contemplates what the role of the anthropologist should be in a world obsessed with maintaining the past, while also rocketing toward the future"--

Let us begin with four vignettes. 2015: Alain Finkielkraut's latest pamphlet, L'identité malheureuse , soars to the top of the sales charts in bookshops across the French-speaking world. Loaded with cultural nostalgia for French exceptionalism and warmth, it trumpets a fear of contemporary change, towards immigration and Islam in particular, and denounces globalization for leading us inexorably down the path of uniformity and oblivion. With its contempt for sociologists and problematic revisionism of Lévi-Strauss, the text is an example of French declinism, and its commercial success is far from trivial. December 2008: Luang Prabang, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in northern Laos. Three Dutch tourists talk among themselves inside the walls of the Vat Nong temple, one of thirty-four monasteries in this holy Buddhist town. As they leave the temple, one declares forlornly, "It's a shame. Locals don't even wear their traditional clothes anymore." 2001: I find myself in the maritime region of Basse-côte in Guinea-Conakry, Africa. In response to my questions about his parents' religious past, during the pre-Islamic time of custom, a young man in his twenties tells me, "There is nothing left here. Nothing has been passed down to us. We, the young, don't know anything about the custom." March 2008: Finally back in Paris, at the UNESCO headquarters. An American anthropologist turned official of the Center for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage declares, "What we're doing here is transmitting what cannot be transmitted anymore or not well!" But what do Finkielkraut's treatise, the discourse of these tourists, the young Guineans, and this UNESCO official all have in common? Despite stemming from different social and cultural environments, do they not all proclaim together that cultures are being lost and that cultural transmission no longer works as it should?   Excerpted from Losing Culture: Nostalgia, Heritage, and Our Accelerated Times by David Berliner All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.