Awareness of the Intangible Value of Cultural Spaces
Kwon Huh
Professor, vice-President, Mongolia International University, Ulaanbaatar (Mongolia)
Keywords: intangible cultural heritage, cultural space, unesco.
Abstract: The paper was prepared to encourage the growth of an awareness of the intangible values of cultural space
and the importance of their safeguarding, as well as the forming of networks between field researchers, NGOs
and local communities. Asia and the Pacific region has long been a melting pot of cultures. However, the
importance of intangible heritage has not well reflected in the cultural heritage policies. The UNESCO’s
World Heritage project starts from a tangible perspective, focused on the outstanding universal value of
physical heritage. There needs to be an intangible approach, one that studies cultural spaces closely as a living
heritage. The role of community in the safeguarding of heritage also differs in the tangible and intangible
approaches. Community is a very important concept in the safeguarding of both tangible and intangible
heritage. In the case of intangible heritage, communities are the actors that carry out its transmission and
enactment, allowing the heritage to live on. One specific solution towards this end is the integrated protection
of tangible and intangible heritage. The UNESCO 2003 Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible
Cultural Heritage, which emphasizes the inseparability of tangible, intangible and natural heritage, will play
an especially important role. Cultural spaces are where history and culture comes together. First, areas with
historical, aesthetic, folk culture and religious value need to be identified. This should be followed by efforts
such as research, documentation and safeguarding of their intangible value. To this end, specific measures
such as research on the available documents, creation of networks between neighbouring countries and
information exchange should be carried out.
1 EVOLUTION OF CONCEPT OF
HERITAGE
Heritage is our legacy from the past, what we live
with today, and what we pass on to future generations.
Irreplaceability is its nature. If it is damaged, it cannot
be fully restored. Syria is one of the terrible cases
whose heritages were sadly destroyed during civil
war. Once the cultural assets are destroyed, it is
impossible to regain their original form. It is natural
that all nations pay close attention and put in efforts
to protect their own heritage. This is because a
nation’s heritage represents its identity and
contributes to the heritage of humanity.
Cultural heritage, which forms the basis of
cultural identity and diversity, becomes crucial as a
foundation for sustainable development and a source
of creativity. Furthermore, as inter-religion, inter-
ethnic conflicts intensify in the 21st century, the
importance of cultural heritage as a bridge towards
peace and inter-cultural understanding is coming
under the spotlight.
In keeping with such changes in understanding
and awareness, the means of safeguarding cultural
heritage are also evolving to become more integrated
and holistic. While preservation measures in the past
centred on buildings, archaeological and historical
sites, a more integrated perspective is being widely
introduced with the enhanced awareness of the
importance of natural and intangible heritage.
The target of protection in the past was focused on
‘points/spots’, in specific sites of heritage, but has
since expanded to ‘area’-based protection, comprised
of core zone and wide buffer zones around the core
areas, giving consideration to the surrounding
environment and scenery. These two methods are the
widely used approaches that most countries have been
adopting to preserve their heritages. However, in
recent, heritage safeguarding has moved beyond
simple spots and areas to three-dimensional
protection, with the value of intangible heritage being
emphasized as the source of cultural development and
creativity.
This change in heritage management was the
result of some social and political factors:
82
Huh, K.
Awareness of the Intangible Value of Cultural Spaces.
DOI: 10.5220/0010303700003051
In Proceedings of the Inter national Conference on Culture Heritage, Education, Sustainable Tourism, and Innovation Technologies (CESIT 2020), pages 82-86
ISBN: 978-989-758-501-2
Copyright
c
2022 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
1) Participation of local communities,
2) Expansion of governance system where the role
of the private sector is emphasized,
3) Need for sustainable development for the future
of the planet, and
4) Importance of cultural diversity and intangible
heritage becoming the focus in conservation
and management policies
2 EXPANSION OF
INTERNATIONAL AWARENESS
OF INTANGIBLE CULTURAL
HERITAGE
With an increasing international awareness of
intangible heritage, UNESCO adopted the
Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible
Cultural Heritage in 2003 as the first international
legal instrument in the field of culture. The
convention was widely supported by countries
particularly in Asia and Africa as soon as it was
adopted and currently has 178 states parties since its
birth. It is recognized as one of UNESCOs most
well-known and influential cultural instrument
together with the World Heritage Convention.
Intangible cultural heritage, transmitted from
generation to generation, is constantly recreated by
communities and groups in response to their
environment, their interaction with nature and their
history. It provides us with a sense of identity and
continuity, thus promoting respect for cultural
diversity and human creativity. In accordance with
provisions of 2003 Convention, the intangible
cultural heritage means 1) the practices,
representations, expressions, knowledge, skills 2) as
well as the instruments, objects, artefacts and cultural
spaces associated therewith. The convention is
classifying the ICH elements into five categories,
They are oral traditions and expressions including
language; performing arts; social practices, rituals
and festive events; knowledge and practices
concerning nature and the universe; and traditional
craftsmanship.
In order to safeguard elements spanning across the
above five categories of ICH elements, all measures
have to be taken to ensure their viability. The 2003
Convention recommends the following nine
measures- “identification, documentation, research,
preservation, protection, promotion, enhancement,
transmission, particularly through formal and non-
formal education, as well as the revitalization of the
various aspects of such heritage”.
3 INTANGIBEL HERITAGE AT
RISK
According to the ICOMOS’s report Heritage at
Risk”, damage to the intangible value of cultural
heritage from the destruction of traditional values due
to commercialization, rapid changes in lifestyle,
destruction of community due to migration, aging
populations, ghettoization, population declines etc. is
becoming more severe with time. Of course, the top
of physical destruction of heritage mainly caused by
development, natural disasters and wars.
This is also true in Korea’s traditional villages,
designated as World Heritage sites. Village
populations are dwindling as younger generations
leave and residents grow older, making it difficult to
maintain the traditional ways of life. The
safeguarding and transmission of heritage is not the
responsibility of a single nation or state but of the
world as a whole. The UNESCO Medium-term
Program and Budget, C/4 states the need to protect
vulnerable intangible heritage very clearly as follows:
“....in discussing the safeguarding of cultural
heritage, intangible cultural heritage is an area that
cannot be overlooked. Intangible heritage, including
symbols and expressions transmitted through oral
tradition, artistic and literary forms, language, way of
life, beliefs and myths, rituals, value systems,
traditional knowledge and various skills and
techniques, are targets of safeguarding.
The current situation on cultural heritage is grave
indeed. Industrialization, rapid urbanization, serious
pollution, various signs of climate change and large-
scale tourism are causing damage, destruction and
loss of cultural heritage. Risk to intangible heritage is
at a peak, as changes in the economic structures
within societies are leading to the extinction of
traditional ways of life.”
Summing up, intangible heritages are diminishing
and being decontextualized in its significance due to
changes in their natural setting or isolation from
cultural spaces (development, migration etc.), rapid
changes in lifestyle (elimination of cultural meaning)
and over-emphasis on the material world (break from
traditions).
Since implementing the Cultural Properties
Protection Act in 1962, Korea has been putting
remarkable efforts and investments into the
protection of tangible and intangible heritage. Key
factors behind the Korean policy were almost the
same of global challenges and trends. They were
urgent needs to 1) recover identity following
liberation from Japanese rules, 2) overcome the side
effects of rapid socioeconomic development, 3)
Awareness of the Intangible Value of Cultural Spaces
83
restore numerous heritage damaged and devastated
during the three years of Korean War and 4) satisfy
the rapid growth in public demand for cultural
products.
4 REDISCOVERY OF SACRED
CULTURAL SPACES
The Earth is compared to a mother as it cradles all
things in its embrace. Within it are special places that
are sacred and secret to specific individuals, groups
and nations. Typically, such places hold special
meaning in mythology, folk tradition, history or
aesthetically, and play a huge role in establishing
cultural identity and symbols. Sacred or forbidden
places include the geographical and historical places
of dynasties, tombs, spiritual and ritual centres such
as temples and churches, spaces related to livelihoods
such as the changes of seasons, rice farming and
hunting, and spaces related to women, life and special
natures of flora and fauna.
According to historical records of Korea, ritual
area in Korean villages around the 3rd to 5th centuries
AD were called “sodo” and were out of bounds to
ordinary people. Even criminals who entered the area
could not be forcibly arrested. The tradition of sodo
continued to later generations which erected sotdae
poles and sacred trees where ancestral rituals were
held.
Sacred and cultural places can exist anywhere,
from mountains to rivers, plains and even roads.
Aside from the space itself, natural and manmade
symbols such as stupas, towers, buildings, trees,
forests and rocks could become the target of worship,
or symbolic objects could become sacred together
with the space. For places related to religion or
history, there often is an elaborate process of
sanctification.
Places have significance in traditional philosophy
and culture. Physical space is a metaphor for nature.
In oriental philosophy, the entire universe is made up
of three elements- heaven, earth and people. This
perspective deeply influenced how people viewed
nature and the universe. The intangible value of space
is not only unique to Asia. The relationship between
nature and humans can be seen in cultures around the
world as a universal theme.
5 UNESCO’S
INTERDISCIPLINARY
APPROACH TO CULTURAL
SPACES
A cultural approach to places has been the
UNESCO’s long held interest. The structural,
organizational and social functions of physical space
have been continuously studied, as they are the origin
of human civilization and platforms for intercultural
exchange. The various sectors of the UNESCO are
currently conducting projects related to this theme.
Under Social Science Sector are projects such as
human HABITAT and urban planning, while the
Natural Science Sector is conducting the bio-diversity
and Man and Biosphere projects. The Culture Sector
emphasizes the relationship between man and cultural
spaces through the World Heritage and Intangible
Cultural Heritage of Humanity projects.
5.1 Man and Biosphere
Since their appearance on Earth, humans have
engaged in a creative dialogue with biological
diversity. They have elaborated and continue to
maintain complex systems of knowledge and practice
as a result of long-standing histories of interaction
with their natural surroundings. In particular,
indigenous and local communities have been playing
a key role in safeguarding of cultural and bio-
diversities. Rock painting of Altamira Cave in Spain,
rock carvings of Tsodilo in Botswana which are both
on the UNESCO World Heritage List, and Koreas
Bangudae Rock carvings are evidence of the
relationship between man and nature.
Indigenous local communities occupy 24% of the
world’s land surface. They are custodians of nature,
whose traditional knowledge and ways of life are
crucial intangible assets. Traditional agriculture,
breeding, fishery and traditional medicines are
important living knowledge of humanity. Some
places such as the Kpasse Sacred Forest (Benin) are
protected from logging and overuse as local
communities protect them as sacred. The Royal
Tombs of Joseon Dynasty, Republic of Korea could
be preserved from the development initiatives for the
long period because it was declared as a forbidden
area.
UNESCO's Man and the Biosphere (MAB),
launched in the early 1970s aims through the
ecological and social sciences, including the
knowledge of indigenous and local communities, to
reconcile humans and nature by promoting
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84
sustainable development and human well-being.
Biosphere reserves are under national sovereign
jurisdiction, yet share their experience and ideas
nationally, regionally and internationally within
UNESCO's World Network of Biosphere Reserves.
There are over 701 biosphere reserves in 124
countries. Asia and the Pacific has 157 sites.
5.2 World Heritage
In order to protect cultural and natural heritage with
outstanding universal values around the world, the
UNESCO established the 1972 World Heritage
Convention and has inscribed 1121 properties in 167
states parties as world heritage. (869 cultural
properties, 213 natural properties, 39 mixed
properties, 53 endangered properties, 39
transboundary properties).
This convention is highly significant as the first to
protect natural heritage together with cultural
heritage. ‘Cultural landscape’ was added to scope of
cultural heritage in 1992. The Tongariro National
Park of New Zealand, Uluru-Kata Tjuta National
Park of Australia, Rice Terraces of the Philippine
Cordilleras and Agricultural Landscape of Southern
Öland in Sweden are some cultural landscapes being
protected under the Convention.
The World Heritage Committee values intangible
aspects in the following ways according to the need
for integrated heritage conservation.
1) The participation and responsibility of local
communities are emphasized for sustainable
conservation. Conservation methods with expanded
participation of local residents are stressed.
2) Two out of the 10 criteria for inscription are
related to intangible heritage.
Criteria vi): “be directly or tangibly associated
with events or living traditions, with ideas, or with
beliefs, with artistic and literary works of outstanding
universal significance.”
Criteria vii): “contain superlative natural
phenomena or areas of exceptional natural beauty and
aesthetic importance.”
3) From 1992, ‘cultural landscape’ showing the
interaction between nature and culture was added as
a new category of cultural heritage. The definition of
cultural landscape was reflected in No. 47 of the
Operational Guidelines.
* Operational Guideline No 47: Cultural
landscapes are cultural properties and represent the
"combined works of nature and of man" designated in
Article 1 of the World Heritage Convention. They are
illustrative of the evolution of human society and
settlement over time, under the influence of the
physical constraints and/or opportunities presented
by their natural environment and of successive social,
economic and cultural forces, both external and
internal (...) The term 'cultural landscape embraces a
diversity of manifestations of the interaction between
humankind and its natural environment.'
4) Sacred mountains were chosen as a theme in
the Global Strategy, with a focus on regions with
significance in folk culture, religion, literature and the
arts, and in the ecological perspective.
Although the World Heritage Convention was
established to protect immovable heritages there has
been an increasing emphasis on the need to safeguard
the historical and cultural environments and
intangible value directly and indirectly related to
immovable heritage in order to realize sustainable and
effective protection. This integrated approach will be
further escalated as the international community
works to achieve the ‘2030 sustainable development
goals.
5.3 Intangible Cultural Heritage
Intangible heritage projects have an emphasis on
natural environments and history by nature. The text
of the 2003 Convention states that there is a deep-
seated interdependence between the intangible
cultural heritage and the tangible cultural and natural
heritage. Therefore, communities, in particular
indigenous communities, groups and, in some cases,
individuals, play an important role in the
safeguarding of the intangible cultural heritage.
Intangible cultural heritage is deeply related to the
spaces in which intangible elements are created and
transmitted. The 2003 Convention defines the
physical spaces in which the intangible elements exist
as part of intangible heritage as well. Several cultural
spaces such as the cultural space of Boysun District,
Uzbekistan have been inscribed on the representative
list, although the number is relatively small compared
to other kinds of intangible heritage. There still needs
to be more research on the relationship between
intangible elements and spaces, protection methods
and roles of local residents.
It is very important to maintain an interest in
physical spaces viewed as sacred by communities and
groups. The cultural heritage protection policies of
Korea has long included cultural spaces by
designating 1) natural monuments of great value to
natural science and culture, 2) natural reserves for the
protection of natural monuments, and 3) national
scenic sites with outstanding natural and cultural
value. The Ministry of Environment and the Korea
National Park Service selected ecologically important
Awareness of the Intangible Value of Cultural Spaces
85
areas such as mountains and coastal regions for
focused management. Many of these areas overlap
with natural reserves designated by the Cultural
Heritage Administration.
When designating natural monuments, the value
of the monument in terms of scientific and cultural
value is considered. Evaluation is conducted in 5
areas, 1) religious cultural value 2) folk traditional
value 3) living cultural value 4) historical value and
5) uniqueness.
6 RECOMMENDATIONS
The UNESCO will continue to lead global efforts to
enhance the sustainability of the planet until 2030, as
part of the global agenda. One specific solution
towards this end is the integrated protection of
tangible and intangible heritage. The 2003
Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible
Cultural Heritage, which emphasizes the
inseparability of tangible, intangible and natural
heritage, will play an especially important role.
Deep reflection and sincere research regarding
cultural spaces and intangible heritage should be
conducted. Cultural spaces are where history and
culture comes together. First, areas with historical,
aesthetic, folk culture and religious value should be
identified. This should be followed by efforts such as
research, documentation and safeguarding of their
intangible value. To this end, specific measures such
as research on the available documents, creation of
networks between neighbouring countries and
information exchange should be carried out.
Asia and the Pacific region has long been a
melting pot of cultures. However, the importance of
intangible heritage has not well reflected in the
formation of cultural heritage policies. The World
Heritage project starts from a tangible perspective,
focused on the outstanding universal value of
physical heritage. There needs to be an intangible
approach, one that studies cultural spaces closely as a
living heritage. The role of community in the
safeguarding of heritage also differs in the tangible
and intangible approaches. Community is a very
important concept in the safeguarding of both
tangible and intangible heritage. In the case of
intangible heritage, communities are the actors that
carry out its transmission and enactment, allowing the
heritage to live on.
Preventative measures are in urgent need, before
further damage is inflicted upon the cultural value of
mountains, rivers, roads and forests. In the
establishment of the prediction model, three stages
are fundamental: possible selection of the variables,
the estimation of the coefficients of the variables
selected and the validation of the model. Ideally, this
validation should be done on different observations.
But in most practical situations, the selection of the
variables, the estimation of the coefficients and the
validation are done using the same sample. Indeed, it
is often difficult to have separate samples for the
various stages of modelling, because the dataset
available to the researcher is frequently too small to
use part of it to establish the regression model and the
remaining for its validation. Sometimes, the number
of predictors is higher than the number of
observations.
REFERENCES
Machat Christoph, Introduction, Heritage at Risk: World
Report 2014-2015, ICOMOS. 8-10.
Gottler Monika, Ripp Matthias, 2017, Community
Involvement in Heritage Management Guidebook, for
the OWHC Regional Secretariat Northwest Europe
and North America.
Neel Kamal Chapagain, 2015, Traditions, materiality and
community engagements with heritage, Revisiting
Kathmandu: Safeguarding Living Urban Heritage,
UNESCO Office in Kathmandu, 109-119.
UNESCO, 2003, Convention for the Safeguarding of the
Intangible Cultural Heritage.
UNESCO, 1972, World Heritage Convention.
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