Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/11600
Title: Cultural Tourism and Museums
Authors: Widyarathne, S.
Keywords: ultural tourism
cultural heritage
tangible heritage
intangible heritage
Issue Date: 2015
Publisher: Centre for Asian Studies, University of Kelaniya
Citation: Widyarathne, Sanjeewani 2015. Cultural Tourism and Museums. 3rd Biennial Conference of the International Association for Asian Heritage, 27th - 28th December 2015, Centre for Asian Studies, University of Kelaniya & International Association for Asian Heritage (IAAH). p. 71.
Abstract: The heritage of a country plays a key role in cultural tourism. In global tourism, this is identified as a rapidly growing segment. Mainly, this trend is set with people who professionally qualified and specialized in the relevant field and those who interest to review cultural heritages. This is evident by analyzing the number of tourists who visited places which are having cultural values in Sri Lanka. Gradually, the number of cultural tourists who visit museums and attend cultural or heritage performances are increasing. The cultural heritage can be divided into two aspects. • Tangible Heritage • Intangible Heritage Intangible cultural heritage does not only represent inherited traditions of the past, but also contemporary rural and urban practices in which diverse cultural groups take part; aspects of the preservation and conservation of cultural intangibles. Folk museums are available here in Sri Lanka for those who interested in intangible heritage of Sri Lanka. Folk Museum Anuradhapura The folk museum reflecting the lifestyle of the Nuwara Kalawiya rural peasantry and proves folk life constitutes the backbone of our culture. The Martin Wickrasinghe Museum of Folk Culture The museum currently holds over a thousand artifacts of Sri Lankan rural life, providing a vast and unique storehouse of knowledge of local folk culture and folk technology going back several centuries. Ambalangoda Mask Museum This museum is designed to introduce into the richness of the mask tradition of Ambalangoda. The museum, the workshop and the small library may serve as a centre for traditional arts and crafts and for research as well. When developing cultural tourism, the folk, traditional culture has faced many challenges in representing intangible heritance of Sri Lanka. Following highlights some of the future tasks required to strengthen the tourism industry in the country.
URI: http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/11600
ISBN: 978-955-4563-62-9
Appears in Collections:3rd Biennial Conference - 2015

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