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This book documents and interprets the trajectory of ethnographic
museums in Tunisia from the colonial to the post-revolutionary
period, demonstrating changes and continuities in role, setting and
architecture across shifting ideological landscapes. The display of
everyday culture in museums is generally looked down upon as being
kitsch and old-fashioned. This research shows that, in Tunisia,
ethnographic museums have been highly significant sites in the
definition of social identities. They have worked as sites that
diffuse social, economic and political tensions through a vast
array of means, such as the exhibition itself, architecture,
activities, tourism, and consumerism. The book excavates the
evolution of paradigms in which Tunisian popular identity has been
expressed through the ethnographic museum, from the modernist
notion of 'indigenous authenticity' under colonial time, to efforts
at developing a Tunisian ethnography after Independence, and more
recent conceptions of cultural diversity since the revolution.
Based on a combination of archival research in Tunisia and in
France, participant observation and interviews with past and
present protagonists in the Tunisian museum field, this research
brings to light new material on an understudied area.
How are issues related to identity representation negotiated in
Middle Eastern and North African museums? Can museums provide a
suitable canvas for minorities to express their voice? Can
narratives change and stereotypes be broken and, if so, what kind
of identities are being deployed?Against the backdrop of the
revolutionary upheavals that have shaken the region in recent
years, the contributors to this volume interrogate a range of case
studies from across the region examining how museums engage
inclusion, diversity and the politics of minority identities. They
bring to the fore the region's diversity and sketch a 'museology of
disaster' in which minoritised political subjects regain
visibility.
How are issues related to identity representation negotiated in
Middle Eastern and North African museums? Can museums provide a
suitable canvas for minorities to express their voice? Can
narratives change and stereotypes be broken and, if so, what kind
of identities are being deployed? Against the backdrop of the
revolutionary upheavals that have shaken the region in recent
years, the contributors to this volume interrogate a range of case
studies from across the region - examining how museums engage
inclusion, diversity and the politics of minority identities. They
bring to the fore the region's diversity and sketches a 'museology
of disaster' in which minoritised political subjects regain
visibility.
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