History, asked by yashgaikwad2929, 11 months ago

complete the graphical presentation cultural heritage​

Answers

Answered by gauravarduino
0

Explanation:

Cultural heritage is the legacy of physical artifacts and intangible attributes of a group or ... hands of tourists, the light required to display them, and other risks of making an object known and available.

Answered by Sunillende12
1

Answer:

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Explanation:

Cultural heritage is the legacy of physical artifacts and intangible attributes of a group or society that is inherited from past generations. Not all legacies of past generations are "heritage", rather heritage is a product of selection by society.

Cultural heritage includes tangible culture (such as buildings, monuments, landscapes, books, works of art, and artifacts), intangible culture (such as folklore, traditions, language, and knowledge), and natural heritage (including culturally significant landscapes, and biodiversity).

The deliberate act of keeping cultural and heritage from the present for the future is known as preservation (American English) or conservation (British English), which cultural and historical ethnic museums and cultural centers promote, though these terms may have more specific or technical meaning in the same contexts in the other dialect. Preserved heritage has become an anchor of the global tourism industry, a major contributor economic value to local communities.

Cultural heritage is usually taken to mean the sites, movable and immovable artifacts, practices, knowledge items, and other things that a group or society has identified as old, important, and therefore worthy of conscious conservation measures, often at the hands of specialized institutions. This invariably comprises only a selection of the total cultural repertory, much of which may not be perceived with similar consciousness. Such a use of ‘heritage’ is a relatively recent extension of the original lexical meaning of individual heirloom to a collective level, as is also true for corresponding terms in other languages such as ‘patrimoine’/‘patrimonio.’ Cultural heritage overlaps with a number of other phenomena and terms, to the point of interchangeable usage, such as cultural property (which is often more clearly delimited and not always old), tradition (which more clearly points to collective practices and to informal modes of transmission, excluding, for example, the works of individual artists that might nonetheless be seen as heritage), social memory and sites of memory/‘lieux de mémoire’ (where the focus is on contemporary commemorative practices), and culture (which in its broad anthropological sense is not restricted to old and publicly recognized things). Tradition in the sense of public traditions is particularly close in meaning, and it appears that much that was discussed under this term in the 1980s is now coming back under a new label. In general, cultural heritage is less used as an analytic term in anthropology where alternatives such as culture, material culture, or performative culture are preferred; rather, it points to the public gaze on old cultural things that is of interest as a social phenomenon.

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