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Curating pasts: musealization and tourism in Chinese cities

Wenhong Luo (Department of Cultural Heritage and Museology, Fudan University, Shanghai, China)
Nelson Graburn (Department of Anthropology, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, California, USA)

International Journal of Tourism Cities

ISSN: 2056-5607

Article publication date: 19 October 2023

73

Abstract

Purpose

China has been going through a “museum boom” paralleling the domestic tourism boom since 2000; such growth changed the cultural landscape; museums became a vital characteristic of some Chinese cities for both residents and tourists. Encouraged by this growth, the more ambitious “All-for-one Museum (全域博物馆)” was proposed. The physical boundary between museums and living spaces is infinite ambiguity, challenging the idea of museums as “heterotopias.” This study aims to explore the musealization of urban spaces in the context of anthropology and museology, scrutinizing the cultural-political intentions and meanings of these developments, and seeks to ignite further investigation into the reconstruction of historical imaginaries for tourists and urban populations across related disciplines.

Design/methodology/approach

This paper examines two cases in Chinese metropolises, Beijing and Shanghai, to illustrate this development of musealization, that is, how the cities actively leverage museological values and methods to connect with their past. In the Beijing case, the authors explore how the local government is leading the effort to musealize the city; in the Shanghai case, they will see how tourists, especially dweller-tourists, navigate through a curated past story in the city and connect their own experience, memory and identity with the place.

Findings

The all-for-one museum creates a museal layer projected onto the bigger urban space, even though the authenticity of the “past” is challenged by the modernization development of the city. The authors also find out that for some tourists (especially dweller-tourists), an existential sense of authenticity plays a more significant role as they not only seek to sightsee the past of the city but also to take part in its creation.

Originality/value

This paper discusses two kinds of musealization in cosmopolitan cities of Beijing and Shanghai: top-down and bottom-up. It approaches questions about the musealization of urban spaces from the perspectives of anthropology and museology, and discusses musealization in the specific historical context of China’s modernization process.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to acknowledge that this article has been presented and discussed with The Tourism Studies Working Group(TSWG) at the University of California Berkery on Nov 12, 2021. We are grateful for the constructive comments and suggestions that we received from the group members.

Citation

Luo, W. and Graburn, N. (2023), "Curating pasts: musealization and tourism in Chinese cities", International Journal of Tourism Cities, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJTC-05-2022-0110

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, International Tourism Studies Association

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