Re-enactments involve the sensuousness of bodily experience and engagement, the exhilarating yet precarious combination of imagination with ‘historical fact’, in-the-moment negotiations between and within temporalities, and the compelling drive to re-make, or re-presence, the past. As such, re-enactments present a number of challenges to traditional understandings of heritage, including taken-for-granted assumptions regarding fixity, conservation, originality, ownership and authenticity. Using a variety of international, cross-disciplinary case studies, this volume explores re-enactment as practice, problem, and/or potential, in order to widen the scope of heritage thinking and analysis toward impermanence, performance, flux, innovation and creativity.
This book was originally published as a special issue of the International Journal of Heritage Studies.
Mads Daugbjerg is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Aarhus University, Denmark.
Rivka Syd Eisner
is a postdoctoral research fellow with the UFSP Asien und Europa at the University of Zurich, Switzerland.Britta Timm Knudsen
is Associate Professor of Aesthetics and Communication at Aarhus University, Denmark.