Migrants as Heritage Makers: Micro-Level Practices and Multiscalar Perspectives in Post-Migration Cultural Heritage Participation

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Abstract

This paper explores migrants' engagement with cultural heritage, approached at the micro level of individual practices and offering a novel model of migrants’ participation in cultural heritage. Grounded in critical heritage studies and recent developments of migration studies, it bridges these fields by applying spatiotemporal and multiscalar perspectives to analyse how migrants negotiate, adapt and redefine their processual, performative heritage practices on a micro level post-migration. Focusing on the heritage performance of Poles in Norway and of Ukrainians in Poland, the study contributes to the growing scholarship on grassroots heritage practices, emphasising migrants’ agency in shaping heritage beyond Authorised Heritage Discourse. By situating people’s micro-participation in heritage after migration within broader structural, social, temporal and spatial contexts, this research fosters a deeper understanding of heritage as a dynamic, processual and multiscalar phenomenon. Keywords: cultural heritage, migration, Poles in Norway, Ukrainians in Poland, multiscalar perspective, transnationality

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