What future(s) for the past. Peripheral cultural heritage beyond resilience

  • Date in the past
  • Wednesday, 29 April 2026, 18:00 - 20:00
  • CATS Auditorium (010.01.05), Voßstraße 2, 69115 Heidelberg
    • Diamantis Panagiotopoulos (Heidelberg)

Can visions of the future emerge in peripheral regions? And can cultural heritage serve as a foundation for social innovation, thereby gaining significant relevance for both the present and the future? These are the questions my presentation engages with. Rather than understanding heritage as a static legacy that must be preserved for some undefined posterity, I conceive of it as an active cultural practice through which societies — particularly those in geographically, economically, and politically marginal regions — continuously reinterpret historical memory and negotiate future possibilities. My focus is on archaeological cities and landscapes in marginal regions of the Mediterranean. The periphery, long regarded within deficit-oriented paradigms as 'lagging behind' metropolitan centers, emerges in this project as a privileged site for the negotiation of future imaginaries through participatory processes. 

  • Address

    Seminar Building, CATS Auditorium (R. 010.01.05),
    Voßstr. 2, 69115 Heidelberg

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All Dates of the Event 'Peripheral Futures — Reading History from the “Margins"'

Where is future created? Based on some of the research done in the Thematic Research Network Denk(t)räume–(Re)thinking and Building Futures and at CAPAS (the Center for Apocalyptic and Postapocalyptic studies), this event series takes the question of building futures from the margins as its starting point for a review of some of the seminal literature in global history. The aim of the event series is to foreground marginalized sources (material peripheries e.g. the “un-disciplined" knowledge produced by the arts) and positions (socio-political pheripheries e.g. that of indigenous protesters), and regions of the world (spatial peripheries, e.g. parts of the world that do not make headline news) as well as specific times (chronological pheripheries: questioning why there may be a privileging of specific periods in time while neglecting others). In taking what is read as “marginal,” its voices and sources seriously, and by including  artistic and activist resources, this  event series offers an intervention to established academic reasoning: at a time when apocalyptic narratives and authoritarian visions of the future dominate public discourse, the events focus on different forms of “critical hope” that can emerge in times of crisis: analytically grounded, socially engaged, and convinced that a diverse, collectively shaped future arises from the productive tension between different worldviews, the event series sets out to test out transcultural perspectives on and alternative approaches to the writing of histories (of and for the future).