Multivocality and Its Implications for the Representation of Heritage: A Case Study of the Slavery Heritage in Mikindani, Tanzania

N. Lwoga, Maximillian Chami, Balele Kafumu, Rachel Kisusi, Paul Ndahani
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Abstract

This article, by using evidence from the old town of Mikindani in Tanzania, explores multivocality in the memorialization of the slavery heritage in Mikindani. It also looks at how multivocality perpetuates dissonance and shapes cultural negotiations and the people’s strategies for coping with violent memories. It employed the notion of heritage dissonance and integrated heritage discourse and a qualitative case-study design. Thirty-three respondents were interviewed and three focus group discussion sessions were held. The findings support the argument that multivocality is an inherent part of heritage that shapes the dissonance regarding what should be conserved and heritage meaning-making processes. Multivocality and the resultant dissonance are further shaped by a complex mix of demographic dynamics, socio-cultural contexts, including religious values, identity struggles, the community’s articulation of the theoretical apparatus, political contexts, including power relations, the local or state political standing, the cultural heritage management (CHM) approach in place, and economic contexts, including the forward-looking nature of the younger people based on the tourist potential of the heritage. Although the resultant dissonance may be passive, it is embedded with the inert social tensions that may not necessarily be harmful to the heritage, but which provide potential spaces for conducting cultural negotiations that strive to defuse the boundaries of identities and the moral superiority–inferiority dogma. This article notes that multivocality should neither be ignored nor evaded, as it could be embraced as a medium for unlocking the sedimentation of a single discourse, understanding and addressing different experiences and expressions and resolving conflicts. The article also provides practical suggestions to the CHM authorities in Mikindani and related sites, as well as suggestions for further research.
多元性及其对遗产表述的影响:坦桑尼亚米金达尼奴隶制遗产案例研究
本文利用坦桑尼亚米金达尼古镇的证据,探讨了米金达尼奴隶制遗产纪念活动中的多元性。文章还探讨了多元性如何使不和谐永久化,如何塑造文化协商以及人们应对暴力记忆的策略。研究采用了遗产不和谐和综合遗产话语的概念以及定性案例研究的设计。对 33 名受访者进行了访谈,并举行了三次焦点小组讨论。研究结果支持这样的论点,即多元性是遗产的固有组成部分,它形成了关于什么应该得到保护和遗产意义形成过程的不和谐。人口动态、社会文化背景(包括宗教价值观)、身份认同斗争、社区对理论机制的阐述、政治背景(包括权力关系)、地方或国家政治地位、现行文化遗产管理(CHM)方法以及经济背景(包括年轻人基于遗产的旅游潜力而具有的前瞻性)等复杂因素进一步塑造了多元性和由此产生的不和谐。尽管由此产生的不和谐可能是被动的,但它蕴含着惰性的社会张力,这些张力不一定对遗产有害,但却为开展文化协商提供了潜在的空间,这些协商努力化解身份界限和道德优劣教条。本文指出,多元性既不应被忽视,也不应被回避,因为多元性可以作为一种媒介,用来打开单一话语的沉淀,理解和处理不同的经验和表达方式,以及解决冲突。文章还为米金达尼及相关遗址的 CHM 管理机构提供了切实可行的建议,并为进一步的研究提出了建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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