How, if it all, do museums shape the ways in
which society understands difference? In recent
decades there has been growing international interest
amongst practitioners, academics and policy makers in
the role that museums might play in confronting
prejudice and promoting human rights and cross-cultural
understanding. Museums in many parts of the world are
increasingly concerned to construct exhibitions which
represent, in more equitable ways, the culturally
pluralist societies within which they operate,
accommodating and engaging with differences on the
basis of gender, race, ethnicity, class, religion,
disability, sexuality and so on. Despite the
ubiquity of these trends, there is nevertheless limited
understanding of the social effects, and attendant
political consequences, of these purposive
representational strategies. Richard Sandell combines
interdisciplinary theoretical perspectives with in-depth
empirical investigation to address a number of timely
questions. How do audiences engage with and respond to
exhibitions designed to contest, subvert and reconfigure
prejudiced conceptions of social groups? To what extent
can museums be understood to shape, not simply reflect,
normative understandings of difference, acceptability
and tolerance? What are the challenges for museums which
attempt to engage audiences in debating morally charged
and contested contemporary social issues and how might
these be addressed? Sandell argues that museums frame,
inform and enable the conversations which audiences and
society more broadly have about difference and
highlights the moral and political challenges,
opportunities and responsibilities which accompany these
constitutive qualities.
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