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Cultural Nationalists, Internationalists, and “Intra-nationalists'': Who's Right and Whose Right?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 October 2009

Joe Watkins
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of New Mexico. Email: jwatkins@unm.edu

Abstract

This paper examines some of the complex issues that relate to the management of “heritage,” primarily as such issues relate to Indigenous populations and communities. Numerous authors such as Aplin,Aplin, Heritage Identification, Conservation, and Management. Barkan and Bush,Barkan and Bush, Claiming the Stones. Brown,Brown, Who Owns Native Culture? and GreenfieldGreenfield, Return of Cultural Treasures. recognize the social, political, and symbolic aspects of heritage and discuss such issues in detail. This paper, therefore, does not approach the broader issues of heritage, but instead focuses on the intricacies of relationships between the various populations that attempt to exert control over particular aspects of heritage. While many authors recognize the role of cultural nationalists and cultural internationalists in the debate over heritage issues, I argue that Indigenous populations and other enclaves within nations— cultural “intranationalists”—comprise a new and growing voice in the debate.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2005 International Cultural Property Society

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