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Publication details
Public Order and Clothing as Everyday Culture.
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Year of publication | 2024 |
Type | Chapter of a book |
MU Faculty or unit | |
Citation | |
Description | Cultural heritage does not include only art and culture (both tangible and intangible). In many ways, our cultural heritage is also a way of life, our everyday reality with its symbols and representations. Cultural heritage covers not only our past but also our future through a direct impact of the former on the latter. Therefore, when speaking about legal regulation, we need to include all these dimensions of cultural heritage. Law grows from our experience and, as such, mirrors our history in the present legal norms, and the law mirrors our cultural heritage, born both from law and peace. Therefore, the lawgiver needs to decide which parts of our cultural history are worth protecting and which parts need to be eliminated as much as possible. Sometimes, researching law can bring new light to the understanding of culture. Surprisingly, precisely that happened during our research on legal representations. While the project and its methods are sociolegal in nature, both qualitative and quantitative, the answers to our questions were often tightly connected to cultural heritage, such as clothing. Not surprisingly, the most fruitful way of interpreting them is through the lens of cultural and legal identity. In Central Europe, identity may be a magic keyword usually used to explain almost everything. However, concerning the legal regulation of cultural heritage in a broader sense, identity seems to be precisely that. This paper proposes an explanation of how everyday culture is treated by law in Central Europe and how it is rooted in our culture. |
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