'How We See The Finns?', Museum Of Ethnography, Shown Now
- 19 Nov 2010 12:00 AM
How We See the Finns addresses the issue of tradition, acquainting the visitor both with how the Finns have viewed tradition over the years, and with how Finnish tradition is seen by Hungarians. Is tradition - or the lack thereof - the driving force in social organisation? What is the relationship between tradition and (post)modernism?
The key word is stereotype: the image formed by one people of the other and its relationship to the former's own self-image. The exhibition enlists several key concepts and phenomena to guide the visitor, as by an infinitely repeated pattern, through familiar ideas, interpreting and - often - re-interpreting them as it goes. The questions the exhibition seeks to answer are addressed through the topic of change: What do scientists have to say about the Finnish people and their culture; what does the "man on the street," or the Finn-aficionado see in them?
The exhibition begins by examining the question: "Why are the Finns so important to us, anyway?" Other topics touched upon include parallels in Finnish and Hungarian history, the Finnish-Hungarian relationship, Finno-Ugric kinship, the situation of East and West, attitudes toward minorities, and the transition from an agricultural to an industrial society.
In its next unit, the exhibition introduces the visitor to what Hungarians construe as "typically Finnish" through several select "stereotypical" examples. The topic is shaped by the notion, "out of the woods, and into civilisation," as this is the essence (if in simplified form) of the "Finnish miracle". Modernisation is accompanied by a close relationship to nature, while certain elements - sauna, mökki, sisu, etc. - are raised to symbolic status.
Source and more information: Museum Of Ethnography
Address: 1055 Budapest, Kossuth Lajos tér 12.
Tel: 473-24-00
Shown until 28 November
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