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CHIMERA
Difficult Heritage

Nuremberg, image from Difficult Heritage project

Sharon Macdonald

Professor of Social Anthropology
School of Social Sciences
Tel: 0161 275 399
Email: sharon.macdonald@manchester.ac.uk
Full Profile
www.sharonmacdonald.net


Research Profile

Professor of Social Anthropology in the School of Social Sciences, I am primarily concerned with questions of how cultural heritage is made, re-made, used and experienced and how this variously invokes, substantiates or challenges collective identities and memories. I am interested in the making of heritage policy and the workings of cultural institutions; and in what happens when policy meets practice, past meets present, and aspirations meet materials.

My research has focused especially on Europe, though I am also interested in questions concerning the globalization of heritage. I carry out ethnographic fieldwork, involving participant-observation and interviews, as well as archival and documentary research. My fieldwork has been in Scotland, England and Germany; and I have looked variously at those involved in deciding what gets to count as heritage, those involved in making and presenting it - such as tour guides, as well as at implicated communities and visitors. Recently I finished a book about negotiating Nazi architectural heritage in Nuremberg post-1945. This brought together historical and ethnographic work to explore some of the struggles, actions and inactions over time. It was part of a broader exploration of how to understand and cope with 'difficult heritage'. My next project, Memorylands, is concerned with what I argue is an anthropologically rather particular - though also diverse - complex of ways of 'doing' identity, memory and heritage in Europe. 

I am on the editorial boards of: International Journal of Heritage Studies,  Memory Studies, Museum and Society, Anthropological Journal of European Cultures and Tourism and Cultural Change. I am a member of the SIEF working group on Cultural Heritage and Property and on the register of UNESCO experts on cultural heritage. As part of an interest in scientific heritage, as well as in questions about forms and design of public display, I am on the board of the Medical Museion in Copenhagen.


Research projects


Events, conferences and seminars

Recent and forthcoming seminars and conference panels that I have convened include:

The following recent and prospective keynote lectures indicate some of my areas of expertise and interest:


Supervision Areas


Current and Former PhD Students


Relevant Publications