1st Edition

Whose Heritage? Challenging Race and Identity in Stuart Hall’s Post-nation Britain

Edited By Susan L.T. Ashley, Degna Stone Copyright 2023
234 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

234 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This edited collection challenges and re-imagines what is ‘heritage’ in Britain as a globalised, vernacular, cosmopolitan ‘post-nation’. It takes its inspiration from the foundational work of public intellectual Stuart Hall (1932–2014). Hall was instrumental in calling out embedded elitist conceptions of ‘The Heritage’ of Britain. The book’s authors challenge us to reconsider what is valued... Read more

Introduction: On Stuart Hall and the Imagining of Heritage

SUSAN ASHLEY and DEGNA STONE

 

Part I STUART HALL’S ESSAY – CONTEXT AND IMPACT

1. Whose Heritage? Un-settling ‘The Heritage’ re-imagining the post-nation

STUART HALL

2. ‘The way in which we learn to sing’: The heritage of ideas behind ‘Whose Heritage?’

MATT MARTIN

3.   Race equality in the cultural heritage sector: Perceptions of progress over the last twenty years and actions for the next decade

CLARA AROKIASAMY, OBE

Part II CHALLENGING ‘WHOSE HERITAGE?’ AS HISTORICAL PRODUCTION

4.  Mothers milk or regurgitated fish?: Resisting nostalgia and embracing dissension in British heritage

DON P. O’MEARA

5.  Beyond our system of objects: Heritage collecting, hoarding and ephemeral objects

ERROL FRANCIS

6.  Historical methods implicated in the making of ‘The Heritage’

LEONIE WIESER

7.   Whose Heritage? Deconstructing and reconstructing counter narratives in heritage

SANDRA SHAKESPEARE, QANITAH MALIK and EDINAM EDEM-JORDJIE

Part III CHALLENGING ‘WHOSE HERITAGE’ THROUGH ARTS & SELF-REFLECTION

8.   In the shadow of Stuart Hall

DAWN WALTON

9.  The Black British presence on television in Barrie Keeffe’s Play for Today (BBC1) dramas and beyond

TOM MAY

10.   Narrative cannibals: who speaks for whom? Heritage, documentary practice and the strategies of power

TINA GHARAVI

11.  Searching for new perspectives on heritage: The Transatlantic Trade in Enslaved Africans

BEVERLEY PREVATT GOLDSTEIN

Part IV FINAL PROVOCATIONS

12.  Brand new, second hand: production, preservation and ‘new’ diasporic forms

ETIENNE JOSEPH

13.  Crisis of authority: Rebuilding the heritage narrative in Stuart Hall’s post-nation state

ROSIE LEWIS

14.   The power to represent

DEGNA STONE

Biography

Susan L. T. Ashley is Associate Professor in Creative and Cultural Industries at Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK. Her research looks at what, how and why heritage knowledge is created, shaped, communicated and consumed in the public sphere. The collaborations that supported Dr Ashley’s AHRC research '(Multi)Cultural Heritag' stimulated the development of this book.

Degna Stone, an award-winning poet living in north east England, is currently undertaking a PhD in Cultural Studies at Northumbria University, examining visibility and expression in African, Asian and Caribbean diaspora arts and heritage in the north of England. Their poetry pulls towards the dark seam of life, raising questions about social injustice and complacency.