Cultural Jugaad in Historic City Transformations: India

Authors

  • Ian Fookes University of Auckland
  • Shikha Jain DRONAH

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53910/26531313-E2020802654

Abstract

Several historic Indian cities have managed to retain the original urban character by using readily available materials, craftspeople, and cultural traditions despite increasing urban transformations. This notion of sustaining/preserving/continuing certain cultural elements and rituals has survived in various forms in the last two centuries. Historic cities showcase their living heritage at the global level and are exemplars for studying the strong linkages within traditions and indigenous modes of preservation. In such situations where stakeholders have centuries of association with the site, it is essential that professionals look beyond conventional solutions to better understand local perceptions and thereby establish the appropriateness of any urban level interventions.

 

This article draws from various urban conservation works carried out in the historic cities of Rajasthan over the last two decades. It illustrates the discoveries and challenges in understanding the traditional local mindset for working in such areas. The indigenous methods practiced in these historic living cores are often at variance with the norms and logics of Western city planning being followed in post-colonial India.  Examples in the cities and settlements of Jaipur, Udaipur and Ajmer, feature in this article, highlighting the urgent need to understand the local community mindset and the Indian approach to solutions for rapidly modernizing historic urban centres.  

 

Author Biographies

Ian Fookes, University of Auckland

Lecturer in the School of Cultures in the School of Cultures, Languages and Linguistics at the University of Auckland, Ian Fookes is developing his PhD thesis into a book entitled Victor Segalen: Exotisme, Altérité, Transcendance, which traces the evolution of a French poet's conception of exoticism and diversity at the beginning of the 20th century. Ian's research explores identity construction through cross-cultural encounter and travel writing, while studying multiculturalism and the role literature and poetry can play in facing the effects of climate change.  

Shikha Jain , DRONAH

Shikha Jain’s wide experience in cultural heritage ranges from representations at International World Heritage UNESCO meetings to conservation planning and on ground implementation of more than 50 conservation and museum projects across India.

As an international expert, she has advised the National Heritage Board, Singapore, FRIM-Malaysia, SGTS, UAE, UNESCO Jakarta Office, Indonesia, UNESCO New Delhi Office and the Department of Archaeology, Myanmar. As Member Secretary to the Advisory Committee on World Heritage from 2012-2015 for Ministry of Culture, India she steered the revisions for Tentative List of India, advised and vetted nomination dossiers submitted annually by India, reviewed world heritage documents, nomination dossiers and state of conservation reports from various countries for India’s response as a World Heritage Committee member. While she personally prepared the nomination dossiers and Management Plans for World Heritage Sites of Jaipur Walled City, Jantar Mantar and the 6 Hill Forts of Rajasthan through her organisation DRONAH before 2012; as Member Secretary, she was responsible for appraising dossiers for nomination of Rani ki Vav, Great Himalayan National Park, Western Ghats, Delhi, Kanchendzonga, Delhi city, Ahmedabad city and, coordination for the transnational nomination of the Capitol Complex, Chandigarh with concerned stakeholders. She is the Asia Pacific Regional Coordinator for the International Scientific Committee ICOFORT. She has headed several conservation projects funded by the Getty Foundation, USA and the World Monuments Fund. She has recently completed the internationally awarded project ‘India Garden’ at Beijing, China for the Ministry of Agriculture, India through her organisation DRONAH.

As Director, DRONAH, she has led more than 50 conservation and museum planning projects across India and received HUDCO awards for 2 projects in 2013 which are also documented as Best Practice projects by the Ministry of Urban Development in 2015. She is State Convener of INTACH Haryana Chapter and member of several Heritage Committees at State and National level.

She has contributed several papers and articles on the cultural heritage of India in national and international journals and conferences. She has authored/ edited books Havelis: A Living Tradition of Rajasthan (Shubhi Publications, 2004), Princely Terrain: Amber, Jaipur and Shekhawati (Shubhi Publications, 2004), Stone Crafts of Rajasthan (CDOS, Government of Rajasthan, 2010) and Haryana: Cultural Heritage supported by INTACH and ASI (Aryan Publications, 2012). She is Visiting Faculty for Urban Conservation in the Department of Urban Planning, SPA, New Delhi and UNESCO C2C at WII, Dehradun and, Adjunct Faculty at Centre for Heritage Management, Ahmedabad University

Published

2022-01-30

How to Cite

Fookes, I., & Jain , S. (2022). Cultural Jugaad in Historic City Transformations: India. Ekistics and The New Habitat, 80(2), 30–32. https://doi.org/10.53910/26531313-E2020802654

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