Description
Museums and Social Change explores the ways museums can work in collaboration with marginalised groups to work for social change and, in so doing, rethink the museum.
Drawing on the first-hand experiences of museum practitioners and their partners around the world, the volume demonstrates the impact of a shared commitment to collaborative, reflective practice. Including analytical discussion from practitioners in their collegial work with women, the homeless, survivors of institutionalised child abuse and people with disabilities, the book draws attention to the significant contributions of small, specialist museums in bringing about social change. It is here, the book argues, that the new museum emerges: when museum practitioners see themselves as partners, working with others to lead social change, this is where museums can play a distinct and important role.
Emerging in response to ongoing calls for museums to be more inclusive and participate in meaningful engagement, Museums and Social Change will be essential reading for academics and students working in museum and gallery studies, librarianship, archives, heritage studies and arts management. It will also be of great interest to those working in history and cultural studies, as well as museum practitioners and social activists around the world.
Table of Contents
List of contributors
Foreword
David Fleming
Editors’ Preface
Introduction - Neither helpful nor unhelpful – a clear way forward for the useful museum
Bernadette Lynch
PART I
Museums and co-creation
1 Behind barbed wire: Co-producing the Danish Welfare Museum
Sarah Smed
2. Rewriting the script: Power and change through a Museum of Homelessness
Jessica and Matthew Turtle
3. March of Women:equality and usefulness in action at Glasgow Women’s Library
Adele Patrick
4. In the name of the museum: The cultural actions and values of the Togo Rural Village Art Museum, Taiwan
Ying-Ying Lai
Part II
Revealing hidden narratives
5. Revealing hidden stories at the Danish Welfare Museum: A collaborative history
Jeppe Wichmann Rasmussen
6. Doors, stairways and pitfalls: Care Leavers’ memory work at the Danish Welfare Museum
Stine Grønbæk Jensen
7. ‘We cannot change the past, but we can change how we look at the past’: The use of creative writing in facing up to personal histories at the Danish Welfare Museum
Trisse Gejl
8. Invite, acknowledge and collect with respect: sensitive narratives at the Vest-Agder Museum, Norway
Kathrin Pabst
9. ‘Nothing about, us without us’: The journey to cultural democracy at Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales
Sioned Hughes and Nia Williams
10. Slow, uncomfortable, and badly paid: DisPLACE and the benefits of disability history
Manon S. Parry, Corrie Tijsseling, and Paul van Trigt
Part III: Taking back
11. The act of emancipating oneself: The museum and the release of adult Care Leavers' case records
Jacob Knage Rasmussen
12. A call to justice at the National Museum of Australia
Adele Chynoweth
Index



