La promotion des valeurs culturelles de la Grande Région dans le cadre des événements culturels transfrontaliers

La promotion des valeurs culturelles de la Grande Région dans le cadre des événements culturels transfrontaliers

Border Region
Greater Region, Lorraine
Language(s)
Français
Introduction

This contribution examines the extent to which the "Luxembourg and Greater Region 2007" event helped to build, transmit and strengthen shared cultural values with the territory's populations.

Content

As part of a constructivist communicational perspective, we are seeking to show how the circulation and appropriation of cultural values as part of a cross-border event changes the representations of the territories, but also how the different appropriations by the stakeholders alter representations of culture itself.

After identifying the effect of obtaining the designation itself, the article explores, through examples concerning the production, implementation and reception of the cultural programme, the operativity of an event in transforming the cultural values of a territory, at different levels (local, regional, cross-border). It shows that, although an event on this scale can lead to a certain dispersion and fragmentation of the cultural values that the populations associate with the territory, certain events reactivating the industrial history of the Greater Region in a sensitive way are nevertheless conducive to the construction of a shared vision capable of uniting the inhabitants of the Greater Region around shared cultural values.

Conclusions

We have attempted to show how, through the organisation of a cultural event, identity constructs can be built on a new territorial scale. The case of "Luxembourg, European Capital of Culture" illustrates the issues and constraints, the potentialities but also the limits of cultural territorial construction. Besides the conditions relating to the candidature rules and certain requirements after designation, the successful and less successful initiatives that we found in the programming reveal the complexity of defining and embodying the shared values of the Greater Region.

The cultural event was seized upon as a means of asserting the cultural density of the Luxembourg territory, in order to identify it as a cultural destination, but also to facilitate the cultural inclusion of the populations with the Greater Region space. To do this, there were numerous cross-border projects focused on encouraging the mobility of audiences within the Greater Region in order to generate shared experiences and the recognition of shared values, and finally to increase these populations' feeling of belonging to a common territory, the Greater Region.  However, the common cultural values were diluted and fragmented in the programming. At the same time, in Lorraine, the cultural values selected by consensus among the cultural stakeholders involved were unoriginal and traditional. We note in the way the events were received that the publics overwhelmingly favour local cultural values attached to their region's past – which in the end is quite logical given the orientation of the programming. The "Citadelles de Feu" show, however, was an interesting example of an event fostering an identity construct at Greater Region level, through a re-appropriation of the common industrial past based on notions of heritage and recollection.

Key Messages

In territorial planning policy, culture is seen as an instrument for transforming the image that populations have of a territory. The "Luxembourg and Greater Region European Capital of Culture 2007" is an example of such a use of culture as a factor for territorial development and cohesion.
First of all, the research sheds light on the way these policies are deployed on concrete terms in large-scale, multidisciplinary and themed cultural programming, on a scale encompassing a cross-border territory.

Then, the richness and diversity of the representations that cultural entertainments produce in audiences confirmed the capacity of such cultural events to bolster shared cultural identities over time.
Finally, the article highlights the importance for the cultural stakeholders involved to clearly identify the scales and dimensions of the territory as experienced by its inhabitants so that cultural events are meaningful and actually become levers for reinforcing a shared territorial identity.

Lead

Gaëlle Crenn, Maison des Sciences de l’Homme, Université de Lorraine

Author of the entry
Contact Person(s)

Gaëlle Crenn

Fonction
Maîtresse de conférences
Organisation
Crem, Université de Lorraine, France
Date of creation
2020
Publisher
PUN - Editions Universitaires de Lorraine
Identifier

ISBN-10 2814301667
ISBN-13 9782814301665