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Conference Report: “scope II: Sites & Subjects. Narrating Heritage” in Vienna: A Conference on Future Potentials of Cultural Heritage Print E-mail
bridges vol. 12, December 2006 / Feature Article
by Robert Temel

On September 28 and 29, 2006, the scope II conference "Sites & Subjects. Narrating Heritage" took place at the Austrian National Library in Vienna, Austria. Starting from the debate introduced by UNESCO with their Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Heritage , which was adopted in 2003 and came into force this year, the conference's objective was not to discuss cultural heritage in the usual, nostalgic context. Instead it referred to a point of view which integrates recent outcomes, e.g., of cultural studies, postcolonial studies, museology, and urbanism.

How the idea evolved
An impressive list of international speakers from these fields as well as political science, anthropology, architecture, and urban studies scope2_Zuna_Kratky_smallmet in Austria to discuss the implications of recent developments concerning questions of cultural heritage. One cause for starting this debate, but far from the only one, is the 2003 UNESCO Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Heritage, which will be joined by Austria next year, as explained by Gabriele Zuna-Kratky, director of the Museum of Technology in Vienna and member of the Council for Research and Technology Development , in her welcome message. Another cause is a study completed by the uma GmbH in May 2006 and commissioned by the Austrian Federal Ministry of Education, Science and Culture (BMBWK); this study dealt with the question of recording and preserving cultural heritage in Austria in relation to cultural and social sciences. Therefore, it seemed appropriate to continue discussing this highly important topic in Austria as well as to include international voices.


uma information technology GmbH is internationally recognized for its projects in the domain of knowledge management and knowledge mediation. Besides the ongoing developments in interface design and information mediation, uma is continuously working on underlying theoretical foundations and research issues, among which the scope conference series is a central project. scope I was entitled "information vs. meaning" and discussed the expected emergence of radically innovative tools and strategies for acquiring knowledge. scope II dealt with cultural heritage.

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