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SUMMARY:Inclusive heritage: invisibilized voices and places / CDH & HAT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250908
DTSTAMP:20260501T180310Z
UID:22689bd0a595d7fdfedccf57002e886dc9568b4b9d582cb3d699a933
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
DESCRIPTION:EPFL et ETH Zürich\nDeveloped in collaboration with students 
 from EPFL and ETH Zurich\, the exhibition Inclusive heritage: invisibilize
 d voices and places showcases twelve case studies conducted across Switzer
 land. These research projects reveal discreet\, sometimes overlooked place
 s that preserve the memory of minoritized communities and individuals with
 out institutional representation. Together\, they propose an alternative m
 apping of Swiss heritage\, grounded in the country’s social and cultural
  plurality.\n\nThe exhibition is being held at EPFL as part of European He
 ritage Days 2025.\n\nIn 1975\, the European Heritage Year adopted the slog
 an: “A future for our past.” Half a century later\, in an era of migra
 tion\, climate upheaval\, and calls for greater social justice\, this exhi
 bition invites us to reconsider that shared future in light of today’s c
 hallenges. It raises an essential question: what do we choose to transmit\
 , and in whose name? \n\nAcross Switzerland\, the exhibition examines hid
 den legacies often absent from official inventories: from prisons to worki
 ng-class neighborhoods\, to the memories of migration. Some studies highli
 ght overlooked practices or lives without monuments\, expanding our unders
 tanding of what can be regarded as heritage.\n\nThrough photographs\, test
 imonies\, and fieldwork\, Mischa Engeler\, Tiffanie Genilloud\, Sofia Gloo
 r\, Malika Jenni\, Tamara Khalil\, Elisa Nadas\, Anna Ozhiganova\, Ernesto
  Pinto De Carvalho\, Léa Roberts\, Lili Rouveure\, Luce Salvadé\, and Ni
 colás Wittig\, supported by Anna Karla de Almeida Milani\, Rune Frandsen\
 , Florence Graezer Bideau\, and Anna Bórbala Hausel\, offer a renewed vis
 ion of Swiss heritage: living and rooted in daily life. This collective pr
 oject not only uncovers forgotten or little-known legacies\; it calls for 
 the building of a more inclusive memory that reflects the diversity of our
  society.\n\nA Future for Whose Past? is an initiative led by the Chair of
  Built Heritage and Monument Conservation at ETH Zurich\, in partnership w
 ith ICOMOS Suisse\, in collaboration with the Heritage\, Anthropology and 
 Technologies (HAT) research group at EPFL\, and with the support of the Fe
 deral Office of Culture. The exhibition originates from pedagogical work u
 ndertaken in the courses "Future Heritage" (ETH Zurich) and "Urban Anthrop
 ology" (EPFL).\n\nFree access\n\n---\n\nACCESS:\n\n	Metro M1\, EPFL or UN
 IL-Sorge stop (signposted from the exit).\n	TL\, Bus 1\, 31 or MBC 201 
 Pâqueret stop\n\n---\nOPENING \n\nTuesday 16 September\, 18:00\, with in
 troductory remarks by Florence Graezer Bideau (HAT\, EPFL)\, Anna Karla de
  Almeida Milani (HAT\, EPFL)\, and Rune Frandsen (CHP\, ETH Zurich).\n\nGU
 IDED TOURS AND PUBLIC DISCUSSIONS during the European Heritage Days:\n \n
 \n	Saturday 13 September 2025\, 13:00 – 14:00\n	Saturday 13 September 20
 25\, 17:30 – 18:30\n	Sunday 14 September 2025\, 13:00 – 14:00\n	Sunday
  14 September 2025\, 17:30 – 18:30\n
LOCATION:Rolex Learning Center (voûte extérieure) https://plan.epfl.ch/?
 room==RLC%20G1%2094.12
STATUS:CONFIRMED
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