Yujie Zhu is an associate professor at the Centre for Heritage and Museum Studies at the Australian National University in Australia. He obtained his PhD in anthropology from Heidelberg University, Germany. His research focuses on the cultural politics of the past within diverse heritage and memory spaces.
""The sheer scale, depth and richness of China’s past certainly provides a seemingly endless resource for writing histories. However, China’s myriad regional diversities, sometimes astounding temporal continuities and discontinuities, together with the complex and, often, pragmatic relations between state and localities, also provide potent ammunition. Through an exploration of how China’s past is deployed in the present, Yujie Zhu’s China’s Heritage through History, critically examines the process of how a sense of ‘pastness’ is narrated, circulated and used in the present. Connecting everyday practices and the local stories of community life to a rapidly expanding tourist industry and a self-consciously global aspiration for a specifically ‘Chinese Heritage’ to be recognised, Zhu’s study develops an insightful critical examination that weaves a conversation between recent research in ‘critical heritage studies’ and non-Anglophone heritage perspectives. Taking a longue durée approach, the book explores the epistemological biography of heritage in China and, crucially, reflects on its future-making prospective as reconfigured pasts are used to forge a purposeful legacy for generations to come."" ~ David C Harvey, Aarhus University. ""Yujie Zhu’s book is an original study of the social practices developed over centuries to transmit China’s cultural heritage to later generations. His long-term perspective makes this study a strikingly original account of the Chinese arts of memory and the people who have preserved and protected it."" ~ Jay Winter, Yale University. ""China’s Heritage through History is an excellent contribution to expanding beyond Western conceptions of heritage, both those used in practice and also in existing heritage studies."" ~ Sharon Macdonald, Humboldt University of Berlin.