
Curating Human Rights
Displaying, Combating and Obscuring Human Rights Violations in Museums
- 232 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Curating Human Rights
Displaying, Combating and Obscuring Human Rights Violations in Museums
About this book
Curating Human Rights conceptualizes the human rights museum as a dynamic cultural-political genre that interacts with multiple social activist, state and corporate stakeholders.
Drawing upon ethnographic and archival research on seven human rights museums in six countries, Ostow examines specifically what these museums do when they set out, or purport, to promote human rights. This includes the stories they visualize, display strategies, educational and other activities, internal structures, the way they position their visitors, the parameters of the human rights they address and the politics of pleasing their multiple stakeholders. The book also explores the contradictions and political and corporate pressure that contributes to foregrounding some human rights violations and ignoring or obscuring others. Ostow also examines the reactions to each museum in the local and national press, and by local visitors, politicians, donors and other stakeholders. The book ends with a discussion of the success and limitations of museums for promoting human rights, and policy recommendations to enhance their effectiveness. Curating Human Rights considers whether these museums are appropriate for, and effective at, promoting human rights - and if they address the pitfalls that have been identified.
Curating Human Rights provides new perspectives on the field of human rights education and activism and will be of interest to academics and students engaged in the study of museums, human rights, culture and communication.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Half Title page
- Series Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Series Editorâs Introduction
- 1 Introduction: Human Rights and the Museums That Display Them
- 2 Displaying the Transatlantic Slave Trade: From Cultural Nationalism to Universal Human Rights on the West Coast of Africa. The Maison des Esclaves, GorĂ©e Island, Senegal 1966â2023
- 3 Reimagining Citizenship and Human Rights in a Museum of Land Restitution: District Six Museum, Cape Town, South Africa
- 4 The Museum as a Laboratory for a Human Rightsâbased Future: The International Slavery Museum, Liverpool, UK
- 5 From Containing Memories of Past Violence to Supporting a Human Rightsâbased Revolution: The Museo de la Memoria y los Derechos Humanos, Santiago, Chile 2006â24
- 6 Corporate Citizenship and Musealizing Human Rights: Coca-Cola and the Center for Civil and Human Rights, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
- 7 Decolonization and Musealizing Human Rights on the Canadian Prairie: The Canadian Museum for Human Rights and the Museum for Canadian Human Rights Violations 2003â23
- 8 Human Rights Museums: Their Contributions and Achievements in Promoting Human Rights. Their Limitations and Their Challenges in the Coming Years
- Index