Heritage

As we chart innovative pathways to the future, does the past matter? And what are our present obligations to it? The idea of “heritage” is a bundle of contrasts and contradictions. It is as much about the present and future as it is about the past. What we think of as our collective heritage is invested with intensely personal and emotional connection, while also being highly managed by authorities and governments, and disciplined within legal and economic regimes. This cluster interrogates the ways in which we fashion, forsake, and mobilize our histories. Courses explore the way material, natural, and cultural heritage celebrates past traditions, reckons with historical injustices and atrocities, and helps us chart our future.

This cluster will be offered throughout 2023-25.

Course

HNUH 268B: Global Heritage

Instructor: Kathryn Lafrenz Samuels

What traction does the past have in society today? This course explores globally how the past gains traction in society today and becomes remade in the present. That inquiry will be guided by the idea of heritage, as it mobilizes the past within a broad spectrum of social, political, economic, and environmental issues. We will examine western relationships to the past as intimately tied to property and the drive to plunder, collect, and catalogue. Increasingly, conceptions of heritage include landscapes, as well as intangibles such as music, dance, and folklore. This broad definition honors the diversity of present-day relations to the past, even as it strains heritage management models that are organized around definitions and regulations, and bear the weight of historical injustice. Close examination of heritage at work within global crisis and struggle prompts questions on who owns the past, and who owns up to it. What do we owe the past, and will we be good ancestors to the future?

GenEd: TBA

Offered in: Fall 2023, Spring 2024, Fall 2024, Spring 2025

Required/Optional: Required

HNUH 268I: Origin Studies: Case Studies in American Identity

Instructor: Robert Graham

E Pluribus Unum, the motto on U.S. currency, is one way to describe how America sees itself as a nation. Yet, the United States has always been a country of disparate, converging cultural identities brought together through circumstance and movement such as colonization, immigration, and the transatlantic slave trade. Despite unifying notions such as the melting-pot metaphor and the Pledge of Allegiance, the American experience is one that features racial and ethnic tensions, varying in intensity depending on the geopolitical context of the moment. If we say we are American, where does that shared heritage align with individual identity and where does it diverge? With theories and tools drawn from Cultural Studies, Sociolinguistics, and Microhistory, this course will explore the construction of racial and ethnic differences to understand the dynamic nature of our heritage(s) and how it shapes our identities.

GenEd: TBA

Offered in: Fall 2024

Required/Optional: Optional

HNUH 268V: Art Museums and the Politics of Cultural Heritage

Instructor: Aneta Georgievska-Shine

Despite the great variety of art museums in the world, these institutions share a common goal: to preserve and interpret cultural consciousness through objects or other material facets of human agency. While these collections often feature the cultural heritage(s) of their lands, in many cases, they also hold objects that have been taken away through illegal or morally questionable practices from their original context. Thus, they prompt discussions about who these holdings really belong to, how they should be displayed and interpreted, and whether they should return to their places of origin. This course explores a number of these issues by asking some fundamental questions: why do art museums matter? How have they evolved over time? What can they become in the future? Students will debate these questions to gain a finer understanding of the complex role of these institutions as custodians of cultural heritage.

GenEd: TBA

Offered in: Spring 2024, Spring 2025

Required/Optional: Optional

HNUH 268W: Where the Waters Blend: Contemporary Indigenous Perspectives on History, Traditions, and Modern Issues

Instructor: Angela Stoltz / Tiara Thomas

In this unique semester-long learning experience, students will explore the history, culture, traditions, and contemporary issues faced by the Piscataway from the perspective of Piscataway course instructors. The experiential work of the course asks students to consider how the past matters, particularly when it is embodied in the land they live on, and their present obligations to it. On-campus and place-based learning, focused on Piscataway precolonial and colonial histories, and contemporary Piscataway issues create opportunities for students to reflect upon and interrogate their understanding of Maryland’s past, present, and future. Students will emerge from this course with a greater understanding of the Piscataway and an increased capacity to challenge colonial and postcolonial paradigms that marginalize the Piscataway as well as other Indigenous people in our region, nation, and across the globe

GenEd: TBA

Offered in: Fall 2023, Fall 2024

Required/Optional: Optional

Video Introduction

Faculty Team

Lead Faculty Fellow

Kathryn Lafrenz Samuels

Collegiate Fellow
Affiliate Fellow
Affiliate Fellow