Exhibiting Nation
Multicultural Nationalism (and Its Limits) in Canada’s Museums
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of British Columbia Press
Published:1st Jul '17
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This exploration of museums as sites for representing and defining national identity encourages us to reconsider the idea of the multicultural nation.
Canada’s brand of nationalism celebrates diversity – as long as it doesn’t challenge the unity, authority, or legitimacy of the state. In Exhibiting Nation, Caitlin Gordon-Walker explores this tension between unity and diversity in three nationally recognized museums, institutions that must make judgments about what counts as “too different” in order to celebrate who we are as a people and a nation.
Exhibiting Nation takes readers on a journey through the Royal BC Museum, the Royal Alberta Museum, and the Royal Ontario Museum, stopping to focus on exhibitions, programs, and architectural features that demonstrate how notions of unity in diversity have shaped the way museums engage visitors’ senses and make use of space. Although the contradictions that lie at the heart of multicultural nationalism have the potential to constrain political engagement and dialogue, Gordon-Walker concludes that the sensory feasts on display in Canada’s museums provide a space for citizens to both question and renegotiate the limits of their national vision.
Exhibiting Nation is an accessible book that contextualizes prominent Canadian institutions within the established study of museology, making it an academic contribution that has been long overdue. Its case study approach will be valuable to both curators and academics[...]
-- Cody Groat * The Canadian Historical ReviISBN: 9780774831642
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 360g
236 pages