Migrant, Multicultural and Diasporic Heritage explores the role heritage has played in representing, contesting and negotiating the history and politics of ethnic, migrant, multicultural, diasporic or 'other' heritages' in, within, between and beyond nations and national boundaries.
Alexandra Dellios (PhD, University of Melbourne) is a historian and lecturer in the Centre for Heritage and Museum Studies at the Australian National University. Her research considers the public and oral history of migrant and refugee communities in Australia and the UK.
Eureka Henrich (PhD, University of New South Wales, Sydney) is a lecturer in history at the University of Hertfordshire, UK. Her research explores histories of migration, health, heritage and memory in Australian and transnational contexts.
1. Migratory Pasts and Heritage Making Presents: Theory and Practice; PART ONE: Challenging Official Heritage and National Historiographies: Expanding Heritage Making Theories; 2. Heritage-making, Borderwork and (Multi)Cultural Organisations in the North of England; 3. The Noncitizen Archive: Transversal Heritage and the Jurisgenerative Process; 4. Objects mediating identity, belonging and cultural difference in Australian museums; 5. Erasing Migrant Bodies: Curating Violence and Exhibiting Migrants on the Mexico-USA Border; PART TWO: Place, Placing Memories and the Politics of Race and Diversity; 6. Intangible Heritage and the Built Environment: Using Multisensory Digital Interfaces to Map Migrants Memories; 7. Place-making and the Finsbury/Pennington Migrant Hostel: Capturing 45 years of refugee and migrant heritage; 8. Cosmopolitan Capitals: Migrant Heritage, Urban Tourism and the Re-Imagining of Australian Cities; 9. The dialectics of xenophobia and cultural creolisation in post-apartheid South Africa; 10. The politics of mnemonic 'restorative practices': Contesting memory, mobility, identity and objects in post 'refugee crisis' Lesbos; PART THREE: Community Participation and Collaboration in Diasporic Heritage Practice; 11. Humanizing Migratory Heritage: Activating New Heritage through People-Centred, Creative Practices; 12. Monumentalizing Refugee Heritage: Vietnamese Boat People Memorials; 13. Definition, Participation and Exceptionalism: An Empirically based discussion of three issues in Migrant Heritage Practices; 14. Heritage regeneration in response to attempted 'cultural genocide': the case of the former Yugoslavia in the UK