1st Edition
Ecomuseums and Living Heritage in China Reclaiming Memory and Identity
List of figures
Chapter 1. Ecomuseums, Community, and Heritage: Foundations and Context
Chapter 2. Ecomuseums in China: Theory, Practice, and the Politics of Place
Chapter 3. Forgotten Old Stories: Tomb Caretakers and Their Descendants of the Imperial Tombs of the Qing Dynasty
Chapter 4. Community Voices: The Idea of Building up An Ecomuseum in Malanyu Town of Hebei Province in China
Chapter 5. Turning Ideas into Reality: The Community Participatory Approach adopted by the Community in Malanyu Ecomuseum Project
Chapter 6. Success and Failure of the Malanyu Ecomuseum Project
Coda
Index
Biography
Meng Li is a Research Fellow in the Architecture and Urbanism Research Group at the University of Leeds, an Associate Fellow of the AdvanceHE (AFHEA), and a Recognised Associate Research Supervisor (RARS) whose interdisciplinary scholarship operates at the intersection of Architecture, Critical Heritage Studies, and New Museology. Holding a PhD in Heritage Conservation, her doctoral research pioneered a practical framework for Chinese ecomuseums, specifically examining the preservation of tangible and intangible heritage among the descendants of Imperial Qing Tomb caretakers. Dr Li has developed a robust academic portfolio through longitudinal research into spatial belonging and AHRC-funded youth-led creative economies. Her achievements include high-impact publications in the International Journal of Heritage Studies, Heritage and Archnet-IJAR. With nearly a decade of research and education experience in Higher Education in both China and the UK, her work continues to advance innovative, user-centred methodologies for sustaining collective memory within complex social contexts.
Gehan Selim is the Hoffman Wood Chair in Architecture at the University of Leeds. She is the Deputy Director at Leeds Institute for Societal Futures and was a Fellow of The Senator George Mitchell Institute for Global Peace, Security and Justice (2017/18). She is leading the Architecture and Urbanism Research Group at the University of Leeds, with her research covering interdisciplinary methods bridging between Architecture, Memory and Digital Heritage. She has developed a track record of publications and has led and coordinated over 20 research projects, working with multi-international teams in the global south, including Jordan, Iraq, Lebanon, and India. Her research received multiple national/international awards, including the Routledge Area Studies Impact Award (2023) and the Newton Fund Prize for Outstanding Impact (2020). She is the author of ‘Unfinished Places’ (Routledge, 2017), ‘Architecture, Space and Memory of Resurrection in Northern Ireland’ (Routledge, 2019), and 'The Perpetuation of Collective Memory in the Built Environment’ (Routledge, forthcoming).






