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        <identifier>oai:meral.edu.mm:recid/2945</identifier>
        <datestamp>2021-12-13T01:15:54Z</datestamp>
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          <dc:title>The impacts of Disaster on Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH): Long term transformation case study of ICH in Myanmar</dc:title>
          <dc:creator>Mya Mya Khin</dc:creator>
          <dc:description>This research focuses on the impacts of disaster on intangible cultural heritage (ICH). In particular, the paper looks at how the native people maintain, transmit and transform their intangible cultural heritage such as traditional knowledge concerned with agriculture, religious documents and handicrafts. When they meet disaster – natural disaster and manmade disaster – in their own lives, how do they cope and adapt for survival and in this process how do they transform their tangible and intangible cultural heritage and daily practices? Using case studies, the research looks at (1) how disaster influences the agriculture and farmers’ coping strategies in the village of Anauk Phwa Saw, Bagan, in the Mandalay Region; (2) how to maintain and transmit traditional knowledge on pottery as documented in Twenty, in the Yangon Region; and (3), the villagers' strategies to maintain and preserve their ICH of bronze inscriptions see in Thidar village, of the Thidar Konepyin region of Nagthaichaung, Ayeyarwady Region will be described to analyze how the native people maintain, transmit and transform their ICH after facing disasters. These cases will shed light on the impacts of disasters on ICH in Myanmar in general. The result of this research will explore their performativity for safeguarding strategies of ICH after disasters.</dc:description>
          <dc:date>2019-03-29</dc:date>
          <dc:identifier>http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12678/0000002945</dc:identifier>
          <dc:identifier>https://meral.edu.mm/records/2945</dc:identifier>
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