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Where knowledge meets: heritage expertise at the intersection of people, perspective, and place
Author(s) -
Yarrow Thomas
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of the royal anthropological institute
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.62
H-Index - 62
eISSN - 1467-9655
pISSN - 1359-0987
DOI - 10.1111/1467-9655.12596
Subject(s) - ethnography , bureaucracy , perspective (graphical) , negotiation , context (archaeology) , sociology , intersection (aeronautics) , consistency (knowledge bases) , ideal (ethics) , epistemology , engineering ethics , environmental ethics , political science , social science , history , anthropology , engineering , politics , law , visual arts , computer science , archaeology , philosophy , artificial intelligence , aerospace engineering , art
Drawing on ethnographic research with heritage professionals in Scotland, the essay explores meetings as organizational devices for differentiating and relating various forms of epistemic, social, and material context. The account describes how the bureaucratic ideal of institutional consistency is achieved through staged encounters between the perspectives of the various people who meet, and the buildings that are the objects of their meeting. These ethnographic examples are used to develop two linked points. Firstly, it is suggested that the lens of ‘meeting’ complicates the relatively monolithic characterizations of heritage expertise evident in widely influential deconstructive critiques of heritage practice. Secondly, it is argued that heritage practitioners’ own accounts of these negotiations highlight material and spatial dimensions of bureaucratic conduct that have that have received relatively little ethnographic attention in prevalent textually orientated accounts.

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