Lietuvos istorijos institutas logo


  • List of journals
  • Browse subjects
  • About Publisher
  • Sitemap
  • Authors
Login Register

  1. Home
  2. Journals
  3. LE
  4. Issues
  5. Volume 24, Issue 33 (2024): Lietuvos etnologija: socialinės antropologijos ir etnologijos studijos
  6. The Cosmopolitan Museum

Lietuvos etnologija / Lithuanian ethnology

Information Archive Contacts LT
  • Article info
  • More
    Article info

The Cosmopolitan Museum
Volume 24, Issue 33 (2024): Lietuvos etnologija: socialinės antropologijos ir etnologijos studijos, pp. 17–25
Adam Kuper  

Authors

 
Placeholder
https://doi.org/10.33918/25386522-2433003
Type: Article      Open accessOpen Access

Pub. online
6 December 2024
Pub. print
6 December 2024

Abstract

Between 2014 and 2018, funded by the European Union’s ‘Creative European Programme’, leaders of ten European ethnographic museums met to discuss a new kind of Museum of Other People, one that would come to terms with the legacy of colonialism and take account of large-scale migration to Europe from Africa and the Middle East. Pioneered in Sweden, the Netherlands, Austria and Germany, this came to be known as the World Culture Museum. It is not a Museum of Other People, because it includes Europe on equal terms, at least in principle, although in practice Europe is present, if at all, only in the form of folk traditions. So what makes a World Culture Museum different from a Museum of Other People?

PDF XML
PDF XML

Copyright
No copyright data available.

Keywords
colonialism cosmopolitan museum European ethnographic museums Museum of Other People

Metrics
since September 2022
90

Article info
views

0

Full article
views

31

PDF
downloads

7

XML
downloads

Export citation

Copy and paste formatted citation
Placeholder

Download citation in file


Share


RSS

Lithuanian Institute of History,

Tilto g. 17, LT-01101 Vilnius, Lithuania.

Email: istorija@istorija.lt

Powered by PubliMill  •  Privacy policy