nanban-harvest

The Authenticity of the Hidden Christians’ Villages in Nagasaki: Issues in Evaluation of Cultural Landscapes

JournalSustainability
PublisherMultidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
DOI10.3390/su13084387
OpenAlexW3155185968
Languageen
ISSN2071-1050
OA?yes
Statuspending

Abstract

Located in the north-western part of Kyushu, “Hidden Christians Sites in the Nagasaki Region” were designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2018. This serial property consists of twelve sites, including the Christian villages that bear unique testimony to a cultural tradition nurtured under a long period of religious prohibition. Based on fieldwork research at Kirishitan villages in Hirado City, this paper shows how the global conservation strategies affect the local people and the sustainability of their cultural tradition. Comparing UNESCO and Japanese cultural landscape protection policies, I argue that the evaluation and selection of sites that begin at the local authorities and stakeholders’ level, is eventually reduced to tangible properties ready-made for tourist consumption. Here, the evaluation subsides under the UNESCO authenticity criteria and narrow governmental interests towards the cultural tradition it is supposed to protect. Therefore, for the protection of cultural landscapes and the living traditions, the decisions by cultural heritage protection authorities should be carefully made, based on scientific research of a cultural tradition, and in the interest of the tradition’s living successors.

Matched Nanban terms

  • anchor Kirishitan
  • places_events Hirado

Provenance

  • openalex (W3155185968)
    2026-04-30T19:55:57.056975+00:00

Candidate PDF URLs

PSourceURLLast attemptLast error
30 openalex https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/8/4387/pdf?version=1619090832

Extras

openalex_conceptsCultural heritage; Tourism; Sustainability; Cultural landscape; Consumption (sociology); Environmental ethics; Cultural heritage management; Geography; Ethnology; Political science
openalex_topicsCultural Heritage Management and Preservation; Urban and spatial planning; Diverse Aspects of Tourism Research