hegemony and heritage
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Cultural landscapes, therefore, are βsignifiers of the culture of those who have made themβ (Cosgrove 1993, p. 8) and, in urban cultures, powerful groups will attempt to determine the limits of meaning for everyone else by universalizing their own cultural truths through traditions, texts, monuments, pictures and landscapes. 300
Related:
π³ Whose Heritage?
π± heritage is political
heritage legitimizes identity
Heritage, the power of the past, and the politics of (mis)recognition