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Tue, 29 Nov 2005 10:59:03 -0500 |
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ahhh, but you've put you're finger on a key problem with museums in the
U.S.
Isn't it the case that many museums and cultural organizations function
as 'country clubs', not to promote inclusion or cultural diversity?
This whole discussion about 'dress code' is about a 'code' that belongs
to the upper middle class. (As well as a matter of 'conformity', which
is another contemporary 'murkin' cultural trait.)
According to the data collected by the NEA and by the US Census bureau,
U.S. museums mainly attract an upper middle class audience, which is
very unfortunate, but hardly a coincidence.
- L.D.
On Nov 29, 2005, at 9:41 AM, REYNOLDS, Trevor wrote:
> The argument about upbringing implies a very non-inclusive attitude
> towards the backgrounds of those who want to work in our institutions.
> There is no reason why your intern should not be the first person in
> their family to work in any form of professional environment. If an
> institution believes that all its interns should come from families
> with a professional background then it will be perpetuating
> “institutional discrimination”.
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