TY - JOUR
T1 - Heritage making and interpretation in postcolonial Harbin
T2 - contemporary urban memory of the Russian-built Harbin Railway Station and beyond
AU - Zhang, Wenzhuo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited.
PY - 2023/11/23
Y1 - 2023/11/23
N2 - Purpose: This paper critically analyses the urban memory and heritage interpretation of postcolonial Harbin, a city in China that was founded by the Russians in 1898. It investigates the role and making of Russian colonial heritage in contemporary Harbin with a detailed case study of the Harbin Railway Station Design/methodology/approach: Research methods include archival analysis, observation and semi-structured interview. In-depth interviews were conducted with local people, architect/urban planners and officials. Findings: Local people of different generations with different backgrounds have different interpretations of the recently made colonial heritage of the Harbin Railway Station. The urban memory of Harbin has been consistently re-forming with both nostalgia and amnesia. Younger generations tend to regard the colonial heritage as their own heritage and a symbol of Harbin's cultural character without considering much about its related colonial history. In today's Harbin, colonial heritage as the “colonial past presencing” is more about a feel of the Europeanised space rather than the actual historical events of the period, and colonial heritage making becomes a tool for urban development and revitalisation at the institutional level. However, due to the paradigm shift in China's urban development, Harbin is facing new challenges in dealing with its colonial heritage. Originality/value: Harbin is an under-researched case in terms of urban heritage studies. This paper offers a new entry point for understanding the westernisation and colonial heritage making in the contemporary China more deeply and thoroughly and helps to see the trend of China's urban development more clearly.
AB - Purpose: This paper critically analyses the urban memory and heritage interpretation of postcolonial Harbin, a city in China that was founded by the Russians in 1898. It investigates the role and making of Russian colonial heritage in contemporary Harbin with a detailed case study of the Harbin Railway Station Design/methodology/approach: Research methods include archival analysis, observation and semi-structured interview. In-depth interviews were conducted with local people, architect/urban planners and officials. Findings: Local people of different generations with different backgrounds have different interpretations of the recently made colonial heritage of the Harbin Railway Station. The urban memory of Harbin has been consistently re-forming with both nostalgia and amnesia. Younger generations tend to regard the colonial heritage as their own heritage and a symbol of Harbin's cultural character without considering much about its related colonial history. In today's Harbin, colonial heritage as the “colonial past presencing” is more about a feel of the Europeanised space rather than the actual historical events of the period, and colonial heritage making becomes a tool for urban development and revitalisation at the institutional level. However, due to the paradigm shift in China's urban development, Harbin is facing new challenges in dealing with its colonial heritage. Originality/value: Harbin is an under-researched case in terms of urban heritage studies. This paper offers a new entry point for understanding the westernisation and colonial heritage making in the contemporary China more deeply and thoroughly and helps to see the trend of China's urban development more clearly.
KW - China
KW - Colonial heritage
KW - Community involvement
KW - Nostalgia
KW - Urban development
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85118544112&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1108/JCHMSD-10-2020-0151
DO - 10.1108/JCHMSD-10-2020-0151
M3 - Article
SN - 2044-1266
VL - 13
SP - 761
EP - 776
JO - Journal of Cultural Heritage Management and Sustainable Development
JF - Journal of Cultural Heritage Management and Sustainable Development
IS - 4
ER -