Globalisation and memory |
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Authors: | Mathilde Bellaigue |
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Institution: | 1. Curator and director of the Ecomuseum of Le Creusot‐Montceau , 44 rue de Babylone, F — 75007, Paris, France E-mail: mathilde.bellaigue@wanadoo.fr;2. Board of the International Committee for Museology of ICOM , 44 rue de Babylone, F — 75007, Paris, France E-mail: mathilde.bellaigue@wanadoo.fr |
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Abstract: | Abstract We live in the ‘era of disparition’, in Paul Virilio's words. Globalisation causes our common markers to disappear: time is worldly and instantaneous. Perception of space is modified; everything can be in the same place at the same time; places tend to standardise. Communities are baffled by wars, ethnocide, emigration. In the midst of all this, collective memory fights for existence. The motto of museums could be, as Virilio says, ‘searching for signs rematerialising the world’. To counter the deleterious effects of disparition, museums should stress the importance of territory and history. Ecomuseums in particular can become the archetype of social places for meetings, for common elucidation resulting in exhibitions, for remembering collective memory. The museum must help the community undertake not so much a duty of memory as a work of memory. The function of the museum is awakening consciousness in many dimensions. |
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Keywords: | Ecomuseums France Globalisation Identity Memory Museums |
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