"It can make a difference because you can take the conversation about
migration away from the heat of political debate and the media, where
arguments tend to be framed in extreme terms and become polarized, and there
is sometimes a dearth of real information. If you can take this conversation
into a calmer cultural space - and the cultural world is where people are
accustomed to test what they think about things - then that is a benefit. I
think that people go to see films, read books or visit museums in order to see
the world through other people's eyes. This automatically makes you question
your own attitudes, and your relationships with other people.
I think that the medium of culture is often where we process our emotional
responses. People sometimes have feelings about migration that are complicated
or internally inconsistent; it is the topic that is on everybody' lips
nowadays - indeed it has been for decades, but the focus is particularly
intense right now. If we can help take these conversations into a
well-informed cultural space then I think that we can make a real contribution
to a calmer, more reasoned public conversation about migration."
Sophie Henderson
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- Henderson, S. (2017). Migration Museum Project. In Acesso Cultural (ed.) The
Inclusion of Migrants and Refugees: The Role of Cultral Organisations.
- photograph via
Brilliant posting, great find!
ReplyDeleteI can't tell you how much I appreciate all the programmes museums develop to include people ... migrants, older people, people with dementia, ... humans. They won't be able to fill all the gaps we have in our society but so many museums do what they can. That's wonderful.
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