Abstract In the postmodern moment—marked by globalization, migration, digital platforms, and ideological pluralism—cultural heritage and identity have become simultaneously fragmented and indispensable. This paper develops a historically grounded yet theoretically agile account of how heritage operates as a dynamic field of negotiation and how identities are formed through iterative engagements with memory, reform, and power. Building on insights from history, sociology, religious studies, and cultural theory, we reconceptualize heritage not as a static legacy but as an evolving process continually reinterpreted through institutions, social struggles, and global cultural flows. Focusing on the Indian experience from the nineteenth century to the present, we track the effects of colonial knowledge systems, socio-religious reform, nationalist mobilizations, and postcolonial state practices on the shaping of heritage and identity. We further analyze contemporary dynamics—platformized culture, tourism, diaspora networks, and UNESCO regimes—and show how these create hybrid identities while producing new anxieties about authenticity and ownership. Through case-led discussion and a conceptual framework, we argue for a middle path that preserves historical depth while embracing pluralism: a dialogical approach that acknowledges continuity alongside change, and reform alongside tradition. Such an approach, we suggest, is essential for addressing identity conflicts and fostering inclusive cultural futures in a postmodern context.
Vinod Prakash R (Sat,) studied this question.
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