Diversitet og museale heterotopier: om naturalisering og nationalisering af kulturel diversitet i migrantnationer

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Standard

Diversitet og museale heterotopier : om naturalisering og nationalisering af kulturel diversitet i migrantnationer. / Damsholt, Tine.

I: Nordisk Museologi, Bind 2012, Nr. 2, 2012, s. 33-46.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Damsholt, T 2012, 'Diversitet og museale heterotopier: om naturalisering og nationalisering af kulturel diversitet i migrantnationer', Nordisk Museologi, bind 2012, nr. 2, s. 33-46.

APA

Damsholt, T. (2012). Diversitet og museale heterotopier: om naturalisering og nationalisering af kulturel diversitet i migrantnationer. Nordisk Museologi, 2012(2), 33-46.

Vancouver

Damsholt T. Diversitet og museale heterotopier: om naturalisering og nationalisering af kulturel diversitet i migrantnationer. Nordisk Museologi. 2012;2012(2):33-46.

Author

Damsholt, Tine. / Diversitet og museale heterotopier : om naturalisering og nationalisering af kulturel diversitet i migrantnationer. I: Nordisk Museologi. 2012 ; Bind 2012, Nr. 2. s. 33-46.

Bibtex

@article{5b4cf75d450f44a48c8e80106fba68fb,
title = "Diversitet og museale heterotopier: om naturalisering og nationalisering af kulturel diversitet i migrantnationer",
abstract = "In old nation states as the Scandinavian a current agenda is to bring cultural diversity into the museums in order to break up the mono-cultural (whether national or local) narrative, and as such to undermine the formation and solidification of nation-states that the proliferation of museums in the nineteenth century was undoubtedly closely bound up with. Especially migration has in the twenty-first century challenged the traditional grand narratives of national heritage and unity materialized in museums. However, when turning to settler- or migrant-nations this agenda is turned upside down. Discussing examples from museums in New York and Sydney and their way of dealing with migrant identities and indigenous people, the paper argues that also cultural diversity can be naturalized, normalized, or even nationalized as cultural heritage. In this alternative grand narrative indigenous people risk ending up as an anomaly or internal {\textquoteleft}other{\textquoteright}. These complex dynamics of cultural diversity and musealising practices are finally discussed in the perspective of the foucauldian notion of heterotopias.",
keywords = "Det Humanistiske Fakultet, migrant identitet, kulturel diversitet, heterotopi",
author = "Tine Damsholt",
year = "2012",
language = "Dansk",
volume = "2012",
pages = "33--46",
journal = "Nordisk Museologi",
issn = "1103-8152",
publisher = "Museumshoejskolen",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Diversitet og museale heterotopier

T2 - om naturalisering og nationalisering af kulturel diversitet i migrantnationer

AU - Damsholt, Tine

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - In old nation states as the Scandinavian a current agenda is to bring cultural diversity into the museums in order to break up the mono-cultural (whether national or local) narrative, and as such to undermine the formation and solidification of nation-states that the proliferation of museums in the nineteenth century was undoubtedly closely bound up with. Especially migration has in the twenty-first century challenged the traditional grand narratives of national heritage and unity materialized in museums. However, when turning to settler- or migrant-nations this agenda is turned upside down. Discussing examples from museums in New York and Sydney and their way of dealing with migrant identities and indigenous people, the paper argues that also cultural diversity can be naturalized, normalized, or even nationalized as cultural heritage. In this alternative grand narrative indigenous people risk ending up as an anomaly or internal ‘other’. These complex dynamics of cultural diversity and musealising practices are finally discussed in the perspective of the foucauldian notion of heterotopias.

AB - In old nation states as the Scandinavian a current agenda is to bring cultural diversity into the museums in order to break up the mono-cultural (whether national or local) narrative, and as such to undermine the formation and solidification of nation-states that the proliferation of museums in the nineteenth century was undoubtedly closely bound up with. Especially migration has in the twenty-first century challenged the traditional grand narratives of national heritage and unity materialized in museums. However, when turning to settler- or migrant-nations this agenda is turned upside down. Discussing examples from museums in New York and Sydney and their way of dealing with migrant identities and indigenous people, the paper argues that also cultural diversity can be naturalized, normalized, or even nationalized as cultural heritage. In this alternative grand narrative indigenous people risk ending up as an anomaly or internal ‘other’. These complex dynamics of cultural diversity and musealising practices are finally discussed in the perspective of the foucauldian notion of heterotopias.

KW - Det Humanistiske Fakultet

KW - migrant identitet, kulturel diversitet, heterotopi

M3 - Tidsskriftartikel

VL - 2012

SP - 33

EP - 46

JO - Nordisk Museologi

JF - Nordisk Museologi

SN - 1103-8152

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 44197784