Beyond Restitution: Heritage, (Dis)Possession and the Politics of Knowledge

ERC (European Research Council)HORIZON-ERCID: 101045661
EC Contribution
€20,000
Consortium Size
1 orgs
Start Year
2022
Summary

On the backdrop of ongoing debates to decolonialize museums, BEYONDREST asks if the return of looted art can be regarded as a closure of historical wounds. The project probes the focus on restitution that inadvertently casts dispossessed art in terms of contested property. Instead, BEYONDREST explores what kind of loss dispossessed art engenders, and how this loss has shaped the knowledge production on heritage. It focuses on the interlocution between Western Europe, the Near and Middle East, and North Africa, mapping relationships between people and “things” that have largely been left out of current debates. The project starts in the mid-19th century, which witnessed the rise of the museum in its modern form as well as violence unleashed by imperial and colonial projects and dispossession. Innumerable objects made their way into international collections, categorized mostly as “Islamic art,” or as the “universal heritage of humankind” that nonetheless symbolically and proprietarily belongs to the “West.” BEYONDREST tackles dispossession not as a loss to be mended but a means to transform knowledge through inquiries into absence. The interdisciplinary research group will employ a wide methodologically matrix, including ethnographic interviews, visual analysis of exhibitions, archival research, and textual analysis of the laws governing cultural assets to capture the proprietary stakes in the interplay of epistemic remembering and forgetting. BEYONDREST takes risks by centering on what is absent, rather than present, on what is lost, rather than found. It argues that the dispossession of art is not merely a problematic of colonialism or empire, that is of the past, but an ongoing process that is constitutive for the governance of heritage in its national and transnational formations. BEYONDREST’s working hypothesis is that the dispossession of art and cultural heritage is not an aberration, but a precondition for the ways in which art and cultural assets circulate.

Consortium (1)

Project Results (9)

Source: CORDIS, the EU research results database.

Publications (8)
"""Doing Research Under Current Ethics Regimes: Some Observations"""
· 2024DOI
Birgit Meyer
"""Erschtterung. Erde und Erbe in der Krise: Tremor. Earth and Heritage in Crisis"""
Veröffentlichungen des Arbeitskreises Theorie und Lehre der Denkmalpflege e.V· 2024DOI
Zoya Masoud
"""Ethics of Listening to the Silence: Voices, Archives, and the Unspoken Past"""
· 2024DOI
Himmat Zoubi
"""Introducing 'Beyond Guidelines': Navigating Mismatched Expectations between Research Ethics and Institutional Ethics Regimes"""
· 2024DOI
Banu Karaca
"""Poor Connections"""
· 2024DOI
Jeremy F. Walton
"""When Off-the-Record Takes Over: Research Ethics under Authoritarianism"""
· 2024DOI
Çiçek İlengiz
Empathy and dialogue: Embracing the art of creative review
Anthropology and Humanism· 2024DOI
Priyanka Borpujari, Ian M. Cook, iek lengiz, Fiona Murphy, Julia ffen, Johann Sander Puustusmaa, Eva van Roekel, Richard Thornton, Susan Wardell
"""The Materialities and Legalities of Forgetting: Dispossession and the Making of Turkey’s (Post-)Ottoman Heritage"""
· 2022DOI
Banu Karaca
Other Results (1)
Periodic Reporting for period 1 - BEYONDREST (Beyond Restitution: Heritage, (Dis)Possession and the Politics of Knowledge)