Jens Andermann and
Silke Arnold-de Simine, “Introduction : Memory, Community and the New Museum,”
Theory Culture Society 2012 29: 3
New museums as part of the “postmodern shift from
authoritative master discourses to the horizontal, practice-related notions of
memory, place, and community.”
Narrativization and performativity of museum
exhibitions to convey new meanings of horizontal, instead of vertical, model of
sense-making. Museums as community formation, “making individual and collective
audiences recognize themselves as subjects of rights and, thus, contributing to
the democratization of culture and society.” “Many ‘new museums’ redefine their
functions in and for communities as spaces of memory, exemplifying the
postmodern shift from authoritative master discourses to the horizontal,
practice-related notions of memory, place and community.”
Concepts of “social memory/communicative memory,”
“postmemory,” “prosthetic memory” as different explanations of transfer of (traumatic)
knowledge/meanings between generations. The idea of “prosthetic memory”
explains how past experiences transmitted through stories/photography/museum
exhibitions participate in the making of human subjectivity. “the museum has
undoubtedly become one of the vital social institutions responsible for
transforming living memory into institutionally constructed and sustained
commemorative practices which enact and give substance to a group identity.”
Still, museums are always part of the public space and capitalist culture, and
instead of ‘reminding’ communities what they would like to forget, they often
conform to stereotypical images, to what communities want to know of themselves.
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