Accepted abstracts
List of all accepted abstracts
(ordered alphabetically by title)[this list is updated regularly – last update 2019-12-02]
NOTE: Complying with the new European GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) we cannot publicly associate Author’s names to titles without express authorisation from the Author. In all cases we obtained Author’s agreement authorship and affiliation is listed.
1st CALL
1714, Catalan National Day, ‘Perfidious Albion’ and Brexit: thoughts on the authenticity of historical memory
John Carman – University of Bermingham – UK
Balochi Oral literature and the role of women
Balochi oral poetry: A pioneering new form of Balochi poetry in Karim Dashti’s Ghazal
Brazilian “Choro” Music: Brazil’s Intangible Identity
Built heritage and Intangible heritage in Historical Urban Landscapes
Shelley-Anne Peleg – University of Haifa – Israel
Cammini d’Italia. On-going strategies for the landscape between business and preservation of tangible and intangible values
Can intangible values of a religious object be musealized?
Challenges of safeguarding wedding ceremonies as Intangible Cultural Heritage
Cultural festival: place identity reconstruction and a cultural tourist experience
Drawing Intangibility
Philippe Campays – Victoria University of Wellington – New Zealand
From Death to Life: Revitalisation of Cultural Heritage though Tourism
Gender and indian music
Grinding Culture and Singing Tradition of Maharashtrian Women: A Means to Express and Transmit Intangible and Inexpressible Cultural Articulations
Immaterial values in historic buildings – How to manage when heritage is intangible?
Mourning Heritage: Mortuary Practices for Craftwork in Japan
Ongoing authenticity. The (re)creation of the historical urban centres in Portugal
Oratorian-Influenced Spatial Typologies in Northern Province of Sri Lanka
Preserving shack life in a changing world
Geoff Ashley – MICOMOS & Alistair Henchman – RPIA – Australia
Promoting intangible cultural heritage through politics: the case of Catalonia
Re-Creating a Sustainable Green Planet (SGP)
Joy Manglani – India
Re-examine George Town’s Traditional Trades as Intangible Cultural Heritage
Reviving the Lost Arts of the Australian Vernacular
Noni Boyd, Jean Rice & Jenny Snowdon – Australia
Sacred Mountain and Living Buddha – Contemporary Re-Imagination of Venerable Daoji (1130-1207AD)’s Legacy
Saving the intangible – future-oriented responses to the Red List of Endangered Crafts (UK)
Sawing old ladies and splitting up donkeys, an intangible heritage still performed in Portugal
Strength Unseen: Intangible Heritage as a Driver for Resilience
Sustainable Cultural Tourism Development in Gaeltacht communities – Managing the Potential of the Wild Atlantic Way
T’Agiasmata: The Holy Water Resources in Istanbul And Their Importance as an Element of the City’s Intangible Cultural Heritage
Tangible outcomes of intangible socio-cultural changes: The case study of Kandovan
The disintegration of society into decadence in the youth of Punjab
The influences and implications of the European Capital of Culture on intangible heritage: Novi Sad 2021
The international interaction between the boundary landmarks of the cities of Santana do Livramento and Rivera
The King-maker: the ethnographer in contemporary succession disputes
Deborah Whelan – University of Lincoln – UK
The Phar and Mata-ni-pachedi: Sacred Textile Arts of Rajasthan and Gujarat, India
Cindy Gould – Iowa State University – USA & Praveen Singh Rathore – India
The river and the birth of a culture: Piracicaba and its intangible issues
Leandra Magri Daruge – University of Algarve – Portugal
The transmission of traditional music outside of traditional society: the “jota” in the Terres de l’Ebre (Southern Catalonia) today
Traditional material and techniques to preseerve the authenticity in Venice
Using Adaptive Reuse as a strategy for the renovation of traditional vernacular architecture in Erbil city
Ahmed Abbas – Hasselt University – Belgium
What Tradition? Shared and Nested Values in the Pacific
Jean Rice – Australia
2nd CALL
13 Million Hectares of Intangible Connections: The Responsibility of National Park Agencies in Indigenous Landscape Management
‘Alchemical Dissonant Heritage’: Commodifying and Monetising Marie Antoinette at Petit Trianon
An Alternative Approach to Safeguarding Intangible Cultural Heritage: The Case of the Museu do Fado, Lisbon
Conservation of traditional musical patrimony as protection of an identity
Converting the Orkneyinga Saga into sustainable tourism
Cultural Crossroads and Commercialization of Native American Culture
Dark Side Values as Designation Heritage in Context Post-Destruction
Discourse in Sesotho Marriages: Romanticising Bohadi (bride price)
Economic Value of Culture: a literature retrospective
Intangible Heritage for the Young Generation
Language as public good for the protection of the environment, territory and landscape
Literature as a Bonding Element in “Orientalizing” Period
‘Living Deltas’: using ecomuseological scholarship as a lens to study global challenges faced in three river deltas in Asia, where Intangible Cultural Heritage safeguarding and promotion can play a key role?
Local museums of Er-Jie community, Taiwan as cultural hubs for sharing and promoting inhabitants’ intangible culture
Persuasive Stories and Literary Houses
Protecting the spirit of ‘hallowed space’ in adapting Anglican churches in England and Wales for additional purposes
Rhythmanalysis as a research tool for living heritage assessment: the case of Galle Fort
Tannahill, cultural assimilation and Irish pastoral song
The Greater Khorasm: Capturing Memory through Material Relations
The intangible traditional handicraft cultures of Assam : Bell metal utensils and bhaona masks
The Interslavic Language: An Opportunity for Promotion of Intangible Heritage
The memory of ancient techniques. Relinquished knowledge as an alternative to the preservation of historical heritage
Towards the dissemination of cultural heritage through digital design and multimedia: the case of the Salt Cathedral of Zipaquirá (Cundinamarca – Colombia)
Traditional Moderns: Modern Traditionals
Using Digital Technology to Support Cross-Cultural Appreciation of Chinese Traditional Puppetry
Working for the Divine: Ritual, Spectacle and the Performance of Identity
