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Post-war migrant built heritage in Melbourne : from assimilation to multiculturalism

conference contribution
posted on 2011-01-01, 00:00 authored by Sally Winkler
If place identities are created by ascribing subjective meaning to sites and buildings it follows that diverse groups will consider place meaning differently. This poses a challenge for the selection and interpretation of heritage sites in plural societies where notions of architectural significance are likely to conflict. Basing heritage policy on the premise of a shared heritage is particularly challenging when the cultural traditions of the past underlie definitions of architectural significance in a more culturally diverse present. This paper presents an introduction to research exploring the inclusion of twentieth century migrant built heritage in Australia. Through selected examples of recently recognised heritage sites in Melbourne, the paper considers how migrant heritage is included and what this reveals about the cultural traditions underlying Australian heritage discourses. The inclusion of migrant places suggests that there is an initial shift in heritage discourses where notions of architectural significance have expanded to include the history of post-war migration. However, the examples raise questions about the nature of cultural inclusivity in heritage frameworks.<br>

History

Location

Geelong, Vic.

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed

Copyright notice

2011, Sally Anne Winkler

Editor/Contributor(s)

H Elkadi, L Xu, J Coulson

Pagination

366 - 374

Start date

2011-09-18

End date

2011-09-21

ISBN-13

9780958192552

Title of proceedings

Proceedings of the 2011 International Conference of the Association of Architecture Schools of Australasia

Event

Association of Architecture Schools of Australasia International Conference : Architecture @ the Edge (2011 : Geelong, Vic.)

Publisher

Deakin University, School of Architecture & Building

Place of publication

Geelong, Vic.

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