Reuse Case: Kimono runway: Difference between revisions
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<p style="background-color:salmon;font-family:'Georgia'; font-size:24px;line-height:32px; padding: 2em; "> | <onlyinclude><p style="background-color:salmon;font-family:'Georgia'; font-size:24px;line-height:32px; padding: 2em; "> | ||
A museum in California, as part of Asian American Heritage Month, puts on display a set of kimonos and invites museum attendees to try them on. Asian-American activists protest the event as a form of cultural appropriation, and point to the runway event, above. Most of the activists were born in America, and come from a variety of Asian ethnicities. There is, however, a counterprotest, by Japanese-born immigrants, who point out that kimonos are, in Japanese culture, a gift object, intentionally created to be worn by outsiders. What should the museum do? | A museum in California, as part of Asian American Heritage Month, puts on display a set of kimonos and invites museum attendees to try them on. Asian-American activists protest the event as a form of cultural appropriation, and point to the runway event, above. Most of the activists were born in America, and come from a variety of Asian ethnicities. There is, however, a counterprotest, by Japanese-born immigrants, who point out that kimonos are, in Japanese culture, a gift object, intentionally created to be worn by outsiders. What should the museum do? | ||
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Part of [[Prompt 07: CC4r case studies]] (C. Thi Nguyen) | Part of [[Prompt 07: CC4r case studies]] (C. Thi Nguyen) | ||
[[Category: Cases]] | [[Category: Cases]] |
Latest revision as of 13:10, 29 April 2024
A museum in California, as part of Asian American Heritage Month, puts on display a set of kimonos and invites museum attendees to try them on. Asian-American activists protest the event as a form of cultural appropriation, and point to the runway event, above. Most of the activists were born in America, and come from a variety of Asian ethnicities. There is, however, a counterprotest, by Japanese-born immigrants, who point out that kimonos are, in Japanese culture, a gift object, intentionally created to be worn by outsiders. What should the museum do?
Part of Prompt 07: CC4r case studies (C. Thi Nguyen)