En middelalderdronning og en tysk bunkersoldat. Om myte, sandhed og narrative substanser i museumsudstillinger

Authors

  • Mikkel Kirkedahl Nielsen
  • Christian Ringskou

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5617/nm.3080

Keywords:

myths, identity, the role of the museum, narratives, narrative substance

Abstract

This article breaks with a traditional truth–lie dichotomy in an attempt to remove the phenomena of the myth from the lie. The authors relate parts of the postmodern discussion of the role of history and Ankersmit’s narrative substances to empirical material in the form of two recent exhibitions challenging myths – about a Danish medieval queen and a German Nazi soldier in a fortified bunker in Denmark, respectively. This unfolds perspectives about how museums add to myth as well as putting myths into perspective, which in turn points to the role of the museum as a place where narratives are constructed through selective processes every day. From an identity perspective, this shifts interest from a positivist-influenced approach to whether stories told by museums can be said to be true or false to a question of producing exhibitions to which visitors can relate and usefully discuss.

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