6 research outputs found

    Et pakistansk hjem på museum

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    Since the foundation in 1894 of Norsk Folkemuseum as a museum devoted to the culture of âthe Norwegian peopleâ, the meaning of that concept has been revised by the museum time and time again. Such changing attitudes were also reflected in its organization: From an initial distinction simply between âthe cityâ and âthe countrysideâ more elements were introduced, with a new department devoted to the life and culture of industrial workers, while another department since the 1950s documented and studied the culture of the Sami, who until then had been under the responsibility of the Ethnographic Museum. This last addition to the museum clearly implied a reconsideration of traditional ideas about the ethnic composition of the nation. New challenges have arisen in later years as a result of the increased immigration from Non-European countries since around 1970. Several projects have recently been initiated in the museum in response to this new situation. This paper deals with one such project.âââThe exhibition A Pakistani Home in Norway, which opened in 2003, is the first permanent museum exhibition dealing with contemporary immigrant life in Norway. The home of a Pakistani family living in Oslo was extensively documented and formed the basis for the exhibition, although some features were consciously altered in order to protect the integrity of the informants. The project posed a number of problems new to the museum, such as how to foresee what possible sanctions informants might experience from others in the local Pakistani community. Cooperation with the informants, e.g. in shopping for exhibition items, brought unexpected insight into various aspects of local Pakistani culture. Although the exhibition does not touch explicitly upon issues central to current public debate, such as integration, marriage patterns and gender roles, the author argues that the exhibition may well constitute a starting point for discussions about such topics. Also, the experiences encountered during the process of creating the exhibition may be useful for other multicultural museum projects in coming years

    Mangfold på museum

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    ”Stilt på likefot”

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    Gravhaug. Presthus, gnr.154, bnr.17, Spangereid, Vest-Agder.

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    Fornminnet lå på Lindesnes kommunes eiendom ved Spangereid kirke, Høllen, umiddelbart N for kirkegårds­muren på en flat mose- og gressbevokst slette, denne går ca 50 m mot V over i et noe mere kupert terreneng. Undersøkelsen kom i stand fordi bruken av en sti over fornminnet hadde ført til at jorden ble nedtrukket og steiner fra fornminnets oppbygning i de senere år var konnnet til syne. Fornminnet var før utgravnineng synlig som en ca 2 m lang svakt buet rekke av steiner med diam. 5-20 cm. Det undersøkte fortidsminne er etter all sannsyn­lighet et gravanlegg med en ubrent begravelse. Den døde har vært plasert på et ØNØ-VSV-gående leie av stein (den nedre steinpakning) med en leirkrukke i SV-lige hjørne Gravutstyrets plassering i gropen antyder at den døde trolig har vært lagt med hodet mot VSV

    Changing histories and ethnicities in a Sámi and Norse borderland

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    Late Iron Age transculturalism in the northern “periphery”: understanding the long-term prehistoric occupational area of Viinivaara E, Finland

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