Patrimoniul cultural de ieri: implicații în dezvoltarea societății durabile de mâine
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and define its cultural content. Some of the stories about being Peranakan (e.g. related to food
and eating) remain difficult to incorporate into museum displays, and will be worked into mu-
seum programming. (The “museum” is conceptualized as both exhibit and program).
When we think of the burgeoning literature on identity, we recognize the subtlety and sophis-
tication of TPM’s curatorial approach: the intent is (still) to display the cultural stuff of identity
and to provide a view on the emic experience of being Peranakan, but it is also to downplay the
variety of boundary-making processes that otherwise distinguish sub-varieties of Peranakans as
well as Peranakans from Others. The viewer should not perceive, at least as the primary view, a
social world riddled and riven by boundaries, whether cultural or temporal. As I see it, it is a kind
of strategy that foregrounds the desirable aspects of identity and community, the beautiful things
that people have achieved – the kinds of things that make people proud of who they are and where
they came from. My assessment here is buttressed by how TPM’s assistant curator responded to
my question about the overwhelming impression from the old exhibit about the restrictions of
women’s life; if I had imagined that the response might be to re-focus on the kinds of networks and
activities that put women into greater connection with the public, there was another tack available:
a life restricted largely to the domestic sphere, I was reminded, was normal for women (not only
Peranakan women) at the turn of the twentieth century, and the important aspect of the exhibit is
that it shows the (beautiful) results of that life: the beaded slippers, the needlework, (the cooking).
Such an insistence on recognizing the achievements of humans, regardless of other limitations, is,
of course, one of the heroic aims that ethnography has claimed
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, and one on which ethnographers
in Moldova have insisted, especially with me. Once again, I was reminded that my singular criti-
cal engagement with a museum may help me to develop questions for my ethnographic research,
but it is hardly authoritative relative to the more multifaceted and ongoing “critical” engagement
of the museum’s curatorial staff. It is important to recognize that the museum’s internal approach
does not culminate in “critique” per se, but uses critique to produce a memory that is
more true
than the alternatives, and
more true
than one that would be created merely by assembling a factual,
sociologically, ethnographically accurate account of the past.
Can ethnography yet claim a role in the mediation of memory, heritage, and communities?
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