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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 August 2021
At the close of the twentieth century, we are witnessing across the globe competing, frequently cataclysmic discourses about identity. These discourses are literally erupting into activities that reshape the meaning of “national culture.” Simultaneously, many of these cultural confrontations are giving visibility and voice to transnational cultural communities. Within this world-wide context, U.S. cultural and educational institutions are at the national frontline of a related volatile, but potentially promising, debate frequently referred to as “cultural wars.” Museums in particular have become a flash point on the cultural landscape of what cultural conservatives Arthur A. Schlesinger and Patrick J. Buchanan accurately, although shrilly, formulate as “a struggle to redefine the national identity.”
James Counts Early was Assistant Provost for Educational and Cultural Programs at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. when he wrote this piece in early 1996. He is a long time political activist in democratic rights and struggles in the U.S., Latin America, Africa and Asia. His professional focus is on the politics of culture, multiculturalism and civil society. He is now the Director of Cultural Studies and Communication at the Smithsonian Center for Folklife Programs and Cultural Studies.