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Mediating Museums
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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 ...
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20 June 2019

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.
Price: $109.00
Pages: 244
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Studies in the History and Society of the Maghrib
Publication Date:
20 June 2019
ISBN: 9789004394964
Format: Hardcover
[...] 'Overall, Mediating Museums is a timely contribution to museum studies in general and research on museums in Arab-majority societies in
particular, which overwhelmingly focus on archaeological museums. Rey offers an impressively detailed and interdisciplinary history of the
shifting social and political-economic roles of Tunisian ethnographic museums in mediating peoples’ relationships to colonialism, independence,
NGOs and international development, emerging tourism economies, and revolution'.
Kyle Craig, Northwestern University, in H-Net Reviews in the Humanities and Social Sciences, published on H-AMCA (March, 2023).
Virginie Rey holds a PhD in Anthropology from the University of Melbourne. Her research interests include cultural representations in museums in the Middle East and North Africa, as well as Islamic visual culture in the West. She is currently a research affiliate in the Department of Anthropology and the Samuel Jordan Center for Persian Studies, at the University of California, Irvine.