Ottoman Intangible Cultural Heritage as an Instrument of Reconciliation?
2023
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Конференцијски прилог (Објављена верзија)
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Intangible cultural heritage – ICH (folk beliefs and knowledge,
language, crafts, etc.) is considered as the core of cultural identity
around which different local communities and even entire
nations often dispute, sometimes violently. It is frequently used
in the processes of instrumentalizing tradition in politics, media,
education, and science, thus posing a risk to peacebuilding, regional
reconciliation, and development. In Southeast Europe especially, and
in the Western Balkans in particular, different communities argue
over which specific elements belong to whose ICH, occasionally
escalating from intellectual debates to bilateral state disputes. In
our presentation, we focus particularly on Ottoman ICH, shared between Croats, Serbs, Bosniaks, and Montenegrins. Our goal
is to demonstrate that shared/contested heritage can be used as a
bridge for reconciliation rather than a source of division in a region
where post-conflict stabilization is still incomplete. Paradoxic...ally,
the layers of Ottoman ICH can serve as a basis for achieving this
goal, precisely because all four nations share them but employ them
in different capacities, by disowning or not considering them as
intrinsic, original, or native.
Кључне речи:
intangible cultural heritage / Ottoman / Balkans / reconciliationИзвор:
Tracing the Ottoman Legacy in Croatia and South East Europe: Challenges, States, Perspectives, 2023, 9-10Издавач:
- Section of Turkish Studies and Department of History Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences University of Zagreb
Напомена:
- International Scientific Conference "Tracing the Ottoman Legacy in Croatia and South East Europe: Challenges, States, Perspectives" 19 and 20 October 2023 Maškovića Han, Vrana (Croatia)
Институција/група
Etnologija i antropologija / Ethnology and AnthropologyTY - CONF AU - Pišev, Marko AU - Milenković, Miloš AU - Banović, Branko PY - 2023 UR - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/6439 AB - Intangible cultural heritage – ICH (folk beliefs and knowledge, language, crafts, etc.) is considered as the core of cultural identity around which different local communities and even entire nations often dispute, sometimes violently. It is frequently used in the processes of instrumentalizing tradition in politics, media, education, and science, thus posing a risk to peacebuilding, regional reconciliation, and development. In Southeast Europe especially, and in the Western Balkans in particular, different communities argue over which specific elements belong to whose ICH, occasionally escalating from intellectual debates to bilateral state disputes. In our presentation, we focus particularly on Ottoman ICH, shared between Croats, Serbs, Bosniaks, and Montenegrins. Our goal is to demonstrate that shared/contested heritage can be used as a bridge for reconciliation rather than a source of division in a region where post-conflict stabilization is still incomplete. Paradoxically, the layers of Ottoman ICH can serve as a basis for achieving this goal, precisely because all four nations share them but employ them in different capacities, by disowning or not considering them as intrinsic, original, or native. PB - Section of Turkish Studies and Department of History Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences University of Zagreb C3 - Tracing the Ottoman Legacy in Croatia and South East Europe: Challenges, States, Perspectives T1 - Ottoman Intangible Cultural Heritage as an Instrument of Reconciliation? EP - 10 SP - 9 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_6439 ER -
@conference{ author = "Pišev, Marko and Milenković, Miloš and Banović, Branko", year = "2023", abstract = "Intangible cultural heritage – ICH (folk beliefs and knowledge, language, crafts, etc.) is considered as the core of cultural identity around which different local communities and even entire nations often dispute, sometimes violently. It is frequently used in the processes of instrumentalizing tradition in politics, media, education, and science, thus posing a risk to peacebuilding, regional reconciliation, and development. In Southeast Europe especially, and in the Western Balkans in particular, different communities argue over which specific elements belong to whose ICH, occasionally escalating from intellectual debates to bilateral state disputes. In our presentation, we focus particularly on Ottoman ICH, shared between Croats, Serbs, Bosniaks, and Montenegrins. Our goal is to demonstrate that shared/contested heritage can be used as a bridge for reconciliation rather than a source of division in a region where post-conflict stabilization is still incomplete. Paradoxically, the layers of Ottoman ICH can serve as a basis for achieving this goal, precisely because all four nations share them but employ them in different capacities, by disowning or not considering them as intrinsic, original, or native.", publisher = "Section of Turkish Studies and Department of History Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences University of Zagreb", journal = "Tracing the Ottoman Legacy in Croatia and South East Europe: Challenges, States, Perspectives", title = "Ottoman Intangible Cultural Heritage as an Instrument of Reconciliation?", pages = "10-9", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_6439" }
Pišev, M., Milenković, M.,& Banović, B.. (2023). Ottoman Intangible Cultural Heritage as an Instrument of Reconciliation?. in Tracing the Ottoman Legacy in Croatia and South East Europe: Challenges, States, Perspectives Section of Turkish Studies and Department of History Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences University of Zagreb., 9-10. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_6439
Pišev M, Milenković M, Banović B. Ottoman Intangible Cultural Heritage as an Instrument of Reconciliation?. in Tracing the Ottoman Legacy in Croatia and South East Europe: Challenges, States, Perspectives. 2023;:9-10. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_6439 .
Pišev, Marko, Milenković, Miloš, Banović, Branko, "Ottoman Intangible Cultural Heritage as an Instrument of Reconciliation?" in Tracing the Ottoman Legacy in Croatia and South East Europe: Challenges, States, Perspectives (2023):9-10, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_6439 .