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Museums, Identity and Family Practices

7 October 2024

A new volume by Theano Moussouri (UCL Institute of Archaeology) exploring museum participation and meaning making in the realm of everyday family practices is now available.

Museums, Identity and Family Practices by Theano Moussouri (Routledge, 2024) - bookcover with colourful abstract shapes with white box in centre with book title

Moussouri, T. (2024), Museums, Identity and Family Practices (Routledge)

In this new volume, Theano Moussouri locates museum participation and meaning making in the realm of everyday family practices, which are central to understanding the role museums play in family social life.

Drawing on a substantial amount of data from a wide range of sources, Theano discusses the importance of understanding how family practices are enacted across settings and how the arena of the museum can facilitate certain family practices and impede others.

Developing and theorising key concepts, the book elucidates the key research themes, including everyday family practice; meaning making; and the structural characteristics of museums as arenas for the family visit activity. The analysis is rooted in a dialectical theoretical framework specifically developed to bridge the macrolevel (social order or the arena of the museum) and microlevel (family practices).

Museums, Identity and Family Practices offers a novel and holistic approach to studying contemporary families and, as such, is key reading for scholars and students of museum and heritage studies, family studies, visitor studies, cultural studies, education, sociology and anthropology. Museum and heritage professionals working with families in different communities around the world will also find this book relevant to their practice.

It is available as a hard copy volume (ISBN 9780367457679) and as an Open Access ebook. The Open Access version of this book, available at http://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

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