我们需要谈谈班级

IF 0.3 0 ART
Serena Iervolino, Domenico Sergi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

阶级差异在博物馆理论和实践中受到的关注历来有限,有关阶级和遗产问题的学术出版物仍然很少。COVID-19 对阶级分化的影响尤为明显。在疫情最严重的时候,工人阶级劳动者(如超市收银员、社会护理人员、卡车和送货司机)被要求承担高水平的健康风险,这暴露了根深蒂固的社会经济不平等。在本文中,我们以伦敦博物馆(前身为伦敦博物馆)和伦敦国王学院于 2021 年开展的小规模研究和收集项目 "不平等、阶级和大流行病 "为基础,讨论博物馆如何在当代新自由主义社会中有意义地参与工人阶级的生活经验。我们首先分析博物馆是否以及如何处理工人阶级问题和(喜)故事。然后,我们借鉴研究参与者的声音和经验,审视伦敦工人阶级所经历的持续存在的结构性不平等。在实证研究的基础上,我们认为博物馆应在恢复阶级在公共文化中的中心地位方面发挥积极作用,特别是在解决工人阶级的当代生活经验方面。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
We Need to Talk about Class
Class differences have historically received limited attention in museum theory and practice, and scholarly publications on issues of class and heritage are still scarce. COVID-19 has shone a particularly harsh light on class divisions. At the height of the pandemic, working-class laborers (such as supermarket cashiers, social care workers, truck and delivery drivers) were asked to shoulder high levels of health risks, exposing entrenched socioeconomic inequities. In this article, we build upon a small-scale research and collecting project, Inequalities, Class, and the Pandemic, carried out in 2021 by the London Museum (formerly known as the Museum of London) and King's College London, to discuss how museums can meaningfully engage with working-class lived experiences in our contemporary neo-liberal societies. We begin by analyzing whether and how museums have addressed working-class issues and (hi)stories. We then draw on the voices and experiences of our research participants to examine the ongoing structural inequalities experienced by working-class Londoners. Building on our empirical research, we argue for museums to play an active role in reclaiming the centrality of class in public culture, particularly addressing the contemporary lived experiences of working-class people.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
15.40%
发文量
0
审稿时长
16 weeks
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