Transcending the Culture–Nature Divide in Cultural Heritage
Author
: Sally Brockwell and Sue OʹConnor, and Denis Byrne
Subject
: Cultural property--Protection--Pacific Area..
Historic preservation--Pacific Area.
Pacific Area--Antiquities
Summary :This volume began life as a session at the 2010 Australian Archaeological Conference on the
cultural heritage of protected areas in the Asia-Pacific region. Our particular concern was with
the proposition that the discourse of nature conservation was predisposed to a vision of protected
areas (in the form of national parks and other ‘nature’ reserves) as pristine nature. According to
such a vision, protected areas represent wildernesses that, having escaped the ravages of human
exploitation, had now to be preserved as the last reservoirs of biodiversity on a planet threatened
with ecological disaster. To what extent, we asked, did such a mindset eclipse the history and
heritage of protected areas as human habitats, not to mention effacing the contemporary presence
in them of living human cultures?
These questions engage the much larger issue of the culture-nature divide as an ontological
marker of Western modernity. This divide should more properly be described as a ‘duality’ or
a ‘dyad’, terms that have been used to describe a habit of thought which developed in the West
from the seventeenth century but with older antecedents. This habit of thought also produced
the distinctive mind/body split which is particularly identified with the Cartesian worldview.
In recent years there has been increasing interest in the real world ramifications of the culturenature
duality from those working in fields ranging from sociology (for example, Latour 1993)
and anthropology (Ingold 2000; Haraway 2006), to geography (Whatmore 2006; Head 2007).
In Australia it has occupied the attention of Debbie Rose (1996, 2011) and others in the
Ecological Humanities group.1 There has been a growing consciousness of the extent to which
culture-nature dualism is foundational to Western modernity and thus seminal to the West’s
encounter with the non-Western world.
In modern Western thought, society (or culture) has been understood to be not just radically
separate from nature but situated in a hierarchical relationship of dominance to it. This ontological
model facilitated the vastly accelerated exploitation and despoliation of natural ‘resources’ (nature
being considered a resource for humanity) which accompanied the Industrial Revolution, the
development of capitalism and the European colonial-imperial project. Closer to home in terms
of the present volume, culture-nature dualism has been found to be a major impediment to
breaking out of the silos represented by nature conservation and heritage conservation. This, of
course, is the view from the position of the experts. The view from the ground includes that of
Indigenous people who find that in the struggle to maintain their land there are willing allies to
be found among environmental and heritage conservation organisations but that these alliances
mean having to internalise the culture-nature dichotomy, at least for the purposes of dealing with
these experts, accessing their funding, and participating in their conservation programs. In other
words such alliances entail an internalisation of an alien ontology.