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Understanding Cultural Landscape at Great Zimbabwe: Realms of Power by Ashton Sinamai engages with archaeology through Karanga/Kalanga concepts of cosmology and philosophy to understand the landscape at Great Zimbabwe, the medieval city and cultural heritage site. Sinamai un-disciplines and decolonializes archaeology and highlights aspects of the landscape that have been impacted by colonial legislations, nationalization, and internationalization. This book provides new perspectives on the landscape, and it addresses debates among African and Western archaeologists in reforming the practice, interpretation, and construction of archaeological narratives in Africa. Sinamai debunks Western myths by exploring African heritage through diverse knowledge systems to illuminate our understanding of place. Each chapter unfurls a variety of facets within Great Zimbabwe, discovering what a place can mean, how it shapes culture, and what emotions and memories can be evoked through local narratives. This book goes beyond human memory and shows how the landscape also remembers. African knowledge systems are essential to the development and understanding of African archaeology and African heritage management systems.
Ashton Sinamai is honorary associate at La Trobe University.
AcknowledgmentsIntroduction: Owning the NarrativeChapter 1: Understanding the Great Zimbabwe LandscapeChapter 2: Legislating Native Culture: The Colonial Legislation and Great ZimbabweChapter 3: Landscape, Memory, and Culture at Great Zimbabwe Chapter 4: The Projection of Power at Great ZimbabweChapter 5: Landscape, Loss, and Gain: Developing the DestinationChapter 6: Human Memory and Landscape at Great ZimbabweChapter 7: Sound, Noise, and Ambience and the Great Zimbabwe LandscapeChapter 8: Sensory Experience and the Ruined Landscape: Awe/Fear as A Heritage ExperienceChapter 9: Decoloniality and Understanding the Changing Landscape at Great ZimbabweReferencesAbout the Author
Ashton Sinamai reinterprets Great Zimbabwe through local knowledge, listening to voices that conventional academic studies have often silenced. This book makes a vital contribution to the decolonization of archaeology and heritage studies. Through an exploration of local communities and their relations with the living, remembering landscape, Sinamai confronts colonial 'pith helmet archaeology' with African understandings of Africa’s own heritage.