Fighting Injustice and Intolerance: Re-Presentations of Race and Religion at the Muhammad Ali Center
Author(s)
Michael Brandon McCormackKeywords
Muhammad Alicultural institutions
museums
representation
curatorial strategies
racial injustice
religious intolerance
spirituality
African American religions
cultural studies
Religions. Mythology. Rationalism
BL1-2790
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This article explores the significance of the Muhammad Ali Center as a site where meanings associated with “race” and “religion” are constructed, contested and potentially transformed. The Muhammad Ali Center is examined as an example of an increasing number of cultural institutions (i.e., cultural centers, museums, arts spaces etc.) engaged in the strategic re-presentation of issues of cultural difference and socio-political conflict, towards the ends of promoting social justice and/or human rights. The article draws upon theories and methods in cultural studies, religious studies, and museums studies in order to explore the significance of the representational and curatorial strategies of such cultural institutions for understanding alternative approaches to influencing and/or intervening in public discourses and practices surrounding issues of racial injustice and religious intolerance.Date
2017-11-01Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:doaj.org/article:d562c42dd7b44693a3d7513c18134f642077-1444
10.3390/rel8110241
https://doaj.org/article/d562c42dd7b44693a3d7513c18134f64