Exhibiting Refugee Routes: Contemporary Collecting as Memory Politics

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v19i3.3155

Keywords:

refugees, contemporary collecting, prosthetic memory, borders, Europe

Abstract

In recent years, numerous European museums have collected objects related to refugees. This article examines the Flight for Life (På Flugt) exhibition (2017), which the National Museum of Denmark organized based on a contemporary collecting project that took place in Greece and Denmark in 2016. Alison Landsberg’s concept of prosthetic memory is made use of here to examine how the exhibition invited visitors to identify with refugees. This empathetic approach had political potential by promoting solidarity with refugees. However, it did not open up a broader contextualization of the collected objects in terms of the migration policies of Denmark and the European Union. This article argues that museums, through contemporary collecting projects of the refugee reception crisis, engage in memory politics by framing how Europe will be able to make sense of the refugee reception crisis of the early twenty-first century.

Author Biography

Randi Marselis, Roskilde University

Associate Professor of Cultural Encounters

 

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Published

01.11.2021

How to Cite

Marselis, R. (2021). Exhibiting Refugee Routes: Contemporary Collecting as Memory Politics. Museum & Society, 19(3), 301–316. https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v19i3.3155

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Articles