Imagine prospectivă a unei contribuții muzeale la regenerarea urbană prin cultură
Prospective Image of a Museum Contribution to Urban Regeneration through Culture
Author(s): Sorin ConstantinescuSubject(s): Anthropology, Museology & Heritage Studies, Architecture, Human Geography, Regional Geography, Preservation, Education and training, Other, Social Philosophy, Civil Society, Public Administration, Local History / Microhistory, Social history, Adult Education, Applied Sociology, Social development, Human Ecology, Rural and urban sociology, Sociology of the arts, business, education, Post-Communist Transformation, Cultural Essay, Scientific Life, Socio-Economic Research
Published by: Editura Universul Academic (SC GOOD LUCK SRL)
Keywords: urban regeneration; culture-led urban regeneration; urban renewal; the Bilbao effect; gentrification; solidarity city; creative class;
Summary/Abstract: The subject of this paper is still not enough explored, not only from the perspective of museum research but also from that of studies belonging to other fields that take into account the need to integrate culture in urban regeneration. Because this topic is current and relevant for the multitude of cultural and social forms in which the museum institution could become a lasting pillar, we believe that our attempt will allow us to sketch an integrative project from which to extract some useful considerations for future research. The conclusions that emerge from positioning the National Museum of Romanian Literature in Bucharest (MNLR), more precisely its cultural hub located in a disadvantaged area, in the epicenter of urban regeneration through culture of the adjacent area, will hopefully be compelling enough to support a cultural axis. Especially since the targeted area (although it has a rich local cultural heritage, which deserves to be capitalized and whose historical memory must be preserved) does not yet experience the long-awaited revival, MNLR - as already demonstrated - can become a crucial actor, together with partners from civil society, in drawing a new cultural axis in the Romanian capital. This could contribute to the transformation of a physically degraded area with precarious living conditions into an engine for integrating culture into the daily concerns of as many fellow citizens as possible, and not only those belonging to the local community. After all, any attempt to achieve a prospective approach focused on the museum institution only validates the generous and mobilizing slogan of ICOM: “Museums have no borders, they have a network”.
Journal: Revista Muzeelor
- Issue Year: 1/2022
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 62-82
- Page Count: 21
- Language: Romanian