1st Edition

Emotional Heritage Visitor Engagement at Museums and Heritage Sites

By Laurajane Smith Copyright 2021
    352 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    352 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Emotional Heritage brings the issues of affect and power in the theorisation of heritage to the fore, whilst also highlighting the affective and political consequences of heritage-making.

    Drawing on interviews with visitors to museums and heritage sites in the United States, Australia and England, Smith argues that obtaining insights into how visitors use such sites enables us to understand the impact and consequences of professional heritage and museological practices. The concept of registers of engagement is introduced to assess variations in how visitors use museums and sites that address national or dissonant histories and the political consequences of their use. Visitors are revealed as agents in the roles cultural institutions play in maintaining or challenging the political and social status quo. Heritage is, Smith argues, about people and their social situatedness and the meaning they, alongside or in concert with cultural institutions, make and mobilise to help them address social problems and expressions of identity and sense of place in and for the present.

    Academics, students and practitioners interested in theories of power and affect in museums and heritage sites will find Emotional Heritage to be an invaluable resource. Helping professionals to understand the potential impact of their practice, the book also provides insights into the role visitors play in the interplay between heritage and politics.

    List of figures

    List of tables

    Acknowledgements

    List of abbreviations

    Introduction

    Part I: Heritage, Politics and Emotion

    1. Critical realist heritage studies: Agency, reflexivity and materiality
    2. Reconsidering heritage and identity: The politics of recognition and the affective practices of heritage.
    3. Registers of engagement

      Part II: Methods and Quantitative Findings
    4. Methods
    5. Overall findings and national comparisons
    6. Genres of museums and heritage sites: Comparisons
    7. Demographic variables and visitor responses
    8. Part III: Emotional Heritage: Themes and Performances

    9. Reassessing learning: Changing views and deepening understanding
    10. Performing reinforcement and affirmation: ‘It just reinforces a lot of the stuff I think’
    11. Emotional banality and heritage-making: The banality of grandiloquence revisited
    12. Intergenerational communication and connection
    13. Heritage and the politics of recognition
    14. Heritage, privilege and the politics of misrecognition

    Conclusion

    Biography

    Laurajane Smith is Director of the Centre for Heritage and Museum Studies at the Australian National University, Canberra. She is Founding President of the Association of Critical Heritage Studies, the editor of the International Journal of Heritage Studies, the cogeneral editor of Routledge’s Key Issues in Cultural Heritage and is best known for her previous book Uses of Heritage (2006, Routledge).

    "Based on a massive amount of empirical research – conducted across continents and years – this ambitious book is a major contribution to heritage debates. Written with verve and clarity, its importance goes far beyond its crucial message that we need to take the emotional dimensions of heritage seriously. In Emotional Heritage, Laurajane Smith not only presents this groundbreaking project but also robustly sets out her analytical stall and manifesto for heritage studies." – Sharon Macdonald, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany

    "This well-researched and easily accessible book is major contribution to both heritage and emotion studies." - Sandra Engels, KULT_online