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Radical Left Culture and Heritage, the Politics of Preservation and Memorialisation, and the Promise of the Metaverse

Mutibwa, Daniel H.

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Abstract

Radical left culture and heritage—understood as incarnations of leftist artefacts and praxis both past and present—have taken risks in challenging hegemonic machinations often when it is unpopular to do so. To the ire of hegemons, leftist projects across the globe have marshalled places, spaces, and technologies into sites of empowerment and struggle utilising ‘small’ and ‘big’ acts of resistance and critical interventions to champion social justice—sometimes successfully, and at other times, less so. However, the preservation of projects’ artefacts, praxis, and memory work has been anything but straightforward, owing primarily to institutional politics and infrastructural and resourcing issues. Taking The Freedom Archives (FA) as a case study, this article explores how FA is preserving the distinctive political education programme that underpinned the iconic liberation struggle in Guinea-Bissau that kickstarted the seismic, global decolonisation project in the late 1950s. The article argues that FA could substantially enhance the preservation and memorialisation of that programme in the Metaverse—if this materialises as a fully open, interoperable, and highly immersive space (1) unfettered by hegemonic regulation, and (2) characterised by ‘strategic witnessing’, ‘radical recordkeeping’, and user agency. In doing so, FA would serve as an exemplar for leftist projects globally.

Citation

Mutibwa, D. H. (2024). Radical Left Culture and Heritage, the Politics of Preservation and Memorialisation, and the Promise of the Metaverse. Heritage, 7(2), 537-575. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage7020026

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 13, 2024
Online Publication Date Jan 24, 2024
Publication Date 2024-02
Deposit Date Apr 17, 2024
Publicly Available Date Apr 18, 2024
Journal Heritage
Print ISSN 2571-9408
Electronic ISSN 2571-9408
Publisher MDPI
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 7
Issue 2
Pages 537-575
DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage7020026
Keywords canonisation; dark heritage; living archive; augmented reality (AR); virtual reality (VR); mixed reality (MR); neuro-enhanced reality (NeR); blockchain technologies; immersive experiences; Metaverse
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/30153813
Publisher URL https://www.mdpi.com/2571-9408/7/2/26

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