The Scotsman

Call for Scots cultural heritage to be protected

- Alison Campsie Heritage Correspond­ent

Legal safeguards are needed to protect Scotland’s ‘living heritage’ from being misreprese­nted by film and television, it has been claimed.

It comes as the the UK moves towards ratifying a 2003 Unesco convention on the protection of intangible cultural heritage with Hogmanay, kilt wearing, waulking songs and peat cutting among likely contenders for Scotland’s offering to a global ‘repository’ of traditions and ways that define us and bind us.

Dr Stephen Collins, of University of West of Scotland, welcomed the move but said “serious discussion” was required to get full legal protection for living heritage, which was often used as a backdrop without proper attributio­n or financial support to communitie­s where traditions originate.

Dr Collins pointed to the success of television series Outlander, partly set in the 18th century Highlands, and the need to have proper accountabi­lity for the depictions of living heritage in such production­s.

Countries including Ghana and Nigeria protect the use of intangible cultural heritage in copyright law with fees paid to either the state or direct to communitie­s for its use, he added.

Dr Collins said: “There are two important issues that we hope the implementa­tion of the 2003 Convention will address: firstly, preservati­on and the handing down of intangible cultural heritage from one generation to the next. This issue is particular­ly acute in areas of Scotland where languages such as Gaelic are disappeari­ng, meaning that the heritage could disappear with them.

“Secondly, exploitati­on, where intangible cultural heritage is used as the backdrop to films and TV shows without attributio­n or any money flowing back to the communitie­s to support safeguardi­ng activities. Without a framework for regulation, the worst-case scenario here is that the intangible

heritage is used in such a way that allows for misreprese­ntation or misinterpr­etation because currently there is no way to challenge that use.”

In Outlander, criticisms have been made about the wrong Fraser tartan being worn by its lead character. In Skyfall, Scotland was depicted simply as “a long drive from London and ends up looking like a Baronial house with tartan carpets and single malt”, Dr Collins said.

Dr Collins recently undertook research with Dr Ben Thomas of Historic Environmen­t Scotland into living heritage in Lewis and Harris, which was funded by the British Academy.

Meanwhile, the Department for Culture Media and Sport has consulted on what should be included in a Uk-wide list of living heritage ahead of the Unesco bid.

Dr Collins said: “Signing up to the soft law convention is great in terms of awareness raising of intangible cultural heritage but it doesn’t cover who owns it and who has the right to say no to its use.

”If an HBO comes and makes an Outlander and there is money raised on that because it is a multi-million pound venture, where does that money flow back to? Does any of that money come back to the originatin­g community?”

Does any of that money come back? Dr Stephen Collins

 ?? PICTURE: STARZ! / SHUTTERSTO­CK ?? Outlander is partly set in the Highlands during the 18th century but there have been some criticisms of the wrong Fraser tartan being worn
PICTURE: STARZ! / SHUTTERSTO­CK Outlander is partly set in the Highlands during the 18th century but there have been some criticisms of the wrong Fraser tartan being worn

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom