Museums, the Media and Refugees: Stories of Crisis, Control and Compassion | BERGHAHN BOOKS
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Museums, the Media and Refugees: Stories of Crisis, Control and Compassion

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Volume 3

Museums and Diversity

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Museums, the Media and Refugees

Stories of Crisis, Control and Compassion

Katherine Goodnow, Jack Lohman and Philip Marfleet

208 pages, large format 8.5in x 11in, 38 color & b/w illus., bibliog., index

ISBN  978-1-84545-542-2 $59.95/£47.95 / Pb / Published (March 2008)

eISBN 978-1-78920-403-2 eBook

https://doi.org/10.3167/9781845455422


View CartYour country: - edit Buy the eBook from these vendorsRequest a Review or Examination Copy (in Digital Format)Recommend to your LibraryAvailable in GOBI®

Description

Across countries and time, asylum-seekers and refugees have been represented in a variety of ways. In some representations they appear negatively, as dangers threatening to ‘over-run’ a country or a region with ‘floods’ of incompatible strangers. In others, the same people are portrayed positively, with compassion, and pictured as desperately in need of assistance. How these competing perceptions are received has significant consequences for determining public policy, human rights, international agreements, and the realization of cultural diversity, and so it is imperative to understand how these images are perpetuated. To this end, this volume reflects on museum practice and the contexts, stories, and images of asylum seekers and refugees prevalent in our mass media.

Based on case studies from Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom, the overall findings are illustrative of narratives and images common to museums and the media throughout the world. They aim to challenge political rhetoric and populist media imagery and consider what forms of dissent are likely to be sustained and what narratives ultimately break through and can lead to empathy and positive political change.

Katherine Goodnow is Professor at the Department of Information Science and Media Studies at the University of Bergen, Norway and co-editor of the UNESCO Museums and Diversity Series.

Jack Lohman is Director of the Museum of London, Professor at the Bergen National Academy of the Arts, Chairman of ICOM UK and co-editor of the UNESCO Museums and Diversity Series.

Philip Marfleet is Professor at the Refugee Studies Programme of the University of East London.

Other Museum and Diversity Titles
Challenge and Transformation  ·  Katherine Goodnow with Jack Lohman and Jatti Brefekamp
Human Remains and Museum Practice  ·  Edited by Jack Lohman and Katherine Goodnow
Scandinavian Museums and Cultural Diversity  ·  edited by Katherine Goodnow and Haci Akman

Subject: Museum StudiesRefugee and Migration Studies
Area: Asia-PacificEurope


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