1st Edition

Migrating Heritage Experiences of Cultural Networks and Cultural Dialogue in Europe

By Perla Innocenti Copyright 2014
    332 Pages
    by Routledge

    332 Pages
    by Routledge

    Bringing together an international forum of experts, this book looks at how museums, libraries and further public cultural institutions respond to the effects of globalisation, mobility and migration across Europe. It puts forward examples of innovative practice and policies that reflect these challenges, looking at issues such as how cultural institutions present themselves to and interact with multicultural audiences, how to support networking across European institutions, and share practice in core activities such as archiving interpreting and exhibiting artefacts. Academics, practitioners from museums and public institutions and policymakers explore theoretical and practical approaches from a range of different disciplines such as museum and cultural heritage studies, cultural memory studies, social anthropology, sociology of organizations, cultural heritage management and cultural heritage informatics.

    Migrating Heritage – Experiences of Cultural Networks and Cultural Dialogue in Europe; 1: ‘Remapping Europe – A Remix': A Case Study in International and Inter-institutional Collaboration and Networking; 2: Translating Objects, Transnationalising Collections: Inventing Europe between Museums and Researchers; 3: Migrating Heritage, Networks and Networking: Europe and Islamic Heritage; 4: Migrations and Multiculturalism: A Design Approach for Cultural Institutions; 5: Visualising Interdisciplinary Research: Algorithmic Treatment of Museum Case-study Information Sets; 6: Europeana: Cultural Heritage in the Digital Age; 7: Moving Through Time and Culture with the Biodiversity Heritage Library; 8: La Cité Nationale de l'Histoire de l'Immigration: A Central Venue and National Network – An Ongoing Challenge; 9: On Their Own: Telling Child Migrant Stories in a Transnational Context; 10: ‘Roma Routes': Heritage as a Path to Dialogue; 11: City Museums Beyond the Museum: Networking as a Strategy for Twenty-firstcentury European City Museums; 12: Turin – Earth: City and New Migrations – From Historical Reflection to Civil Consciousness in the Present Day; 13: Inclusive Collecting Strategies of City Museums in a Diverse Society: Thoughts on the Implementation of Multi-perspectivity beyond Group Categories; 14: Post-critical Museology: The Distributed Museum and the Crisis of European Representation; 15: The Issue of Repatriation for Natural History Museums in Europe: Attempts at the Sharing of Heritage between Science and Traditional Societies; 16: Critical Objects: Museums, Refugees and Intercultural Dialogue; 17: A ‘Curious' Case Study: Creating Intercultural Dialogue through Objects; 18: Project ‘Blickwinkel': Rediscovering, Reinventing and Reinterpreting Collections at the Kölnisches Stadtmuseum, Cologne; 19: The Reggiane Factory and New Immigrants: Memory and Local History to Strengthen Integration; 20: Separate Workings: Exploring Hidden Histories by Examining the Racially Biased Policies in the Transport Systems of South Africa and the Display of a South African Railways Locomotive at the Riverside Museum, Glasgow; 21: Intercultural Dialogue as the Mission of a Museum: The ‘Officina Multimediale di Papa Giovanni XXIII' in Sotto il Monte, Bergamo, Italy; 22: Self-promotion or Cultural and Ideological Infiltration? Foreign Donations and Acquisition Suggestions in the British Library: A Russian Case Study; 23: Library and Museum Hybridisation: Ultimate Spatial Forms of Institutional Collaboration in the Process of Identity Representation; 24: Re-collecting and Connecting: Public Art, Migrating Heritage and the Relocation of Cultural Memory

    Biography

    Perla Innocenti, University of Glasgow, UK.

    ’The world is on the move and, yet, museums are still made of bricks and mortar. This book takes up the important topic of how cultural institutions across Europe are responding to heightened globalization, migration, and interculturality. Theoretically rich and practically-oriented, it brings to light when and how museums are helping to create successful diverse communities and nations.’ Peggy Levitt, Wellesley College, USA 'This book is an informative contribution dealing with the cultural heritage of the plural society in the 21st century. It devotes itself to the question of how public cultural institutions can react to the effects of globalization in Europe. The suggestions and case studies in this volume broaden one’s mind since they are written by authors with different professional backgrounds and thus go beyond the usual academic discussion.’ Elisabeth Tietmeyer, Museum Europäischer Kulturen - Staatliche Museen zu Berlin (The Museum of European Cultures, Berlin National Museums), Germany 'In difficult times for the European project, with migration at the very heart of controversy, here is a much-needed analytical take on nation-transcending heritage institutions and practices in the digital age, by a bevy of diverse, well-qualified authors.' Philip Schlesinger, University of Glasgow, Scotland, UK ’This thought-provoking collection demonstrates the many and varied opportunities museums and galleries offer for intercultural engagement. It brings together an impressive multi-disciplinary array of authors, including academic analysts, educators and curators, whose critical perspectives produce a creative dialogue that lays good foundations for the development of innovative approaches to grappling with issues around unbounded identities and displaced heritages.’ Ullrich Kockel, Heriot-Watt University Edinburgh, UK 'This volume is highly recommended for those concerned with issues relating to migration and cultural heritage, as well as anyone