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Conclusions: The new Museums of China

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 March 2014

Marzia Varutti
Affiliation:
Post-doctoral fellow at the Centre for Museum Studies, Department of Culture Studies and Oriental Languages, University of Oslo
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Summary

Throughout Chinese history, the meanings and values attributed to cultural heritage have reflected the stability and the transformations, the weaknesses and the virtues deployed in the exercising of authority. Since the 19th century, Chinese museums have provided not only a framework for the viewing, appreciation and interpretation of cultural heritage, but also a setting for the representation of contrasting narratives of the past and present of the Chinese nation.

In China, perhaps more than anywhere else, museums have played a crucial role in rooting political authority, instilling a sense of unity, creating a common identity and developing images of the national self. Post-1949, museums became key institutions in the process of nation-building, of which the Communist Party was the sole architect. Museums' contents, forms, objectives and priorities were (re)designed to fulfil the requirements of the new ideology. Providing ‘political education’ was the primary function of museums.

At the outset of the new millennium, against the backdrop of what Kirk Denton (2005, 565) has called the ‘ideology of market reform’, China's socio-economic evolution is transforming the profile of the country, impacting on virtually every aspect of social life: social relations, living standards, working life, education, leisure activities, mobility, health and the environment, to mention just a few. In such a volatile, complex context, it is perhaps not so strange that the Chinese government is again turning its attention to museums.

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Chapter
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Museums in China
The Politics of Representation after Mao
, pp. 159 - 164
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2014

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