Whose Heritage is it anyway? Managing changing historic interpretations 2

This is the second of a two-part webinar (5 & 12 November 2020) looking at how to respond to the changing emphasis and appropriateness of cultural icons, in the context of the Black Lives Matter and other movements.

Since the toppling of the Edward Colston statue in Bristol in June this year, there has been far greater debate about how we reassess the reputations of historical figures celebrated in the public realm or with place names. Re-appraising the messages given by local icons, dedications or memorials in historic towns and cities can involve far wider audiences in protecting or managing our built heritage if their legacies are better understood. But in doing this, we need to be able to agree as communities what these celebrated people (or place names) represent today and will say in the future.

Less recent examples include the calls for the US city of Aberdeen’s bridge to be renamed after the late musician Kurt Cobain, who could be defined in different ways by different audiences. Or Wolverhampton’s tenth century female icon, Lady Wulfrun, from whose farmlands the city grew.

There is no clear consensus on the right approach – whether to remove or re-interpret dedications – so many local councils, cultural institutions, and civic and historical societies are reviewing the messages behind local icons and associations in a political context. Yet this reappraisal can create a raft of new opportunities for greater heritage appreciation: allowing new or hidden heritage stories to come to the fore, and making history more relevant to contemporary life.

Our speakers will look at:

  • Researching historic legacies
  • Recognising the range of historic legacies
  • Assessing legacies and start a debate on contested heritage
  • Managing conflicting views about historic icons and their future
  • The significance of contested heritage to place identity
  • Rediscovering overlooked and positive dedications
  • Creating a new place identity
  • Using new perspectives to reveal hidden history.

Speakers:

  • Welcome, Louise Thomas, Director, HTVF
  • Introduction and Recap – Chair, Dr Steven Parissien
  • Contested histories, contested memorials, Professor Catherine Hall, Chair of the Centre for the Study of the Legacies of British Slave-Ownership, UCL
  • A review of statues, monuments, memorials, street names and works of art with links to slavery and colonialism, Cllr Sonia Winifred, Lambeth Council
  • Dead Monuments, Live Pasts: contested heritage and social inclusion, Jasper Chalcraft, Jean Monnet Fellow, The Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies, European University Institute
  • Murals and Moral Panics: Thinking through historical questions about commemoration and heritage, 
    Dr Charlotte Lydia Riley, Lecturer in Twentieth-Century British History, University of Southampton
A recording of this webinar is available to rent.
Please contact us for more information.
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