ABSTRACT

Diversity of Belonging in Europe analyzes conflicting notions of identity and

belonging in contemporary Europe. Addressing the creation, negotiation, and (re)

use of diverse spaces and places of belonging, the book examines their fascinating

complexities in the context of a changing Europe.

Taking an innovative interdisciplinary approach, the volume examines

renegotiations of belonging played out through cultural encounters with difference

and change, in diverse public spaces and contested places. Highlighting the

interconnections between social change and culture, heritage, and memory, the

chapters analyze multilayered public spaces and the negotiations over culture and

belonging that are connected to them. Through analyses of diverse case studies, the

editors and authors draw out the significance of the participation or exclusion of

differing community, grassroots, and activist groups in such practices and discourses

of belonging in relation to the contemporary emergence of identity conflicts and

political uses of the past across Europe. They analyze the ways in which people’s

sense of belonging is connected to cultural, heritage, and memory practices

undertaken in different public spaces, including museums, cultural and community

centres, city monuments and built heritage, neglected urban spaces, and online fora.

Diversity of Belonging in Europe provides a valuable contribution to the

existing bodies of work on identities, migration, public space, memory, and

heritage. The book will be of interest to scholars and students with an interest in

contested belonging, public spaces, and the role of culture and heritage.

 

Susannah Eckersley is Senior Lecturer at Newcastle University, UK, an

Associated Research Fellow at the Leibniz Centre for Contemporary History

(ZZF) in Potsdam, Germany, and the Project Leader of en/counter/points – a

collaborative European research project on public spaces and belonging funded

by HERA. Her expertise is in memory, museums, difficult heritage, migration,

identities, and belonging.

Claske Vos is an anthropologist and Assistant Professor in the Department of

European Studies at the Humanities Faculty of the University of Amsterdam, the

Netherlands. Her current work focuses on the intersection of EU funding, cultural

activism, and enlargement. Her expertise is in European cultural policy, cultural

heritage, Southeast Europe, and European identity formation.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

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part I|122 pages

Redefining and negotiating public spaces of belonging

chapter |2 pages

Introduction to Part I

Redefining and negotiating public spaces of belonging
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chapter Chapter 1|24 pages

Museums as a public space of belonging?

Negotiating dialectics of purpose, presentation, and participation
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chapter Chapter 2|21 pages

Negotiated belonging

Migrant religious institutions in Warsaw
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chapter Chapter 3|21 pages

“Deep historicization” and political and spatio-temporal “centrism”

Layers of time and belonging in the reconstructed city centres of Berlin and Potsdam
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chapter Chapter 4|17 pages

Shaping Europeanness: the European Year of Cultural Heritage 2018 as a new mode of governance

Between coordinative and communicative discourses
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chapter Chapter 5|17 pages

The iceberg, the stage, and the kitchen

Neglected public places and the role of design-led interventions
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chapter Chapter 6|18 pages

Establishing a place in the European cultural space

Grassroots cultural action and practices of self-governance in Southeast Europe
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part II|118 pages

Encountering contested belongings in public places

chapter |2 pages

Introduction to Part II

Encountering contested belongings in public places
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chapter Chapter 7|20 pages

Taxonomies of pain

Museal embodiments of identity and belonging in post-communist Romania
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chapter Chapter 8|18 pages

Negotiation of belonging of built heritage

Russian and Soviet heritage in Warsaw
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chapter Chapter 9|20 pages

In the centre of conflict

Negotiating belonging and public space in post-unification Berlin Mitte
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chapter Chapter 10|18 pages

Encounters through Kahlenberg

Urban traces of transnational right-wing action
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chapter Chapter 11|21 pages

Staged claims of belonging

English museums, Brexit, and the “Windrush Scandal”
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chapter Chapter 12|17 pages

Redefining collective heritage, identities, and belonging

Colonial statues in the times of Black Lives Matter
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