News & events > Publication: "Words Matter: An Unfinished Guide to Word Choices in the Cultural Sector"
01 Feb 2019

Publication: "Words Matter: An Unfinished Guide to Word Choices in the Cultural Sector"

The National Museums of World Cultures in the Netherlands have published Words Matter: An Unfinished Guide to Word Choices in the Cultural SectorThe publication, available online, results from the awareness that the ways of speaking about cultural objects in museums and society changes over time. That words and norms around language are constantly in transition can cause confusion and discomfort to those accustomed to these words; this is also true within museums. But society changes, and language changes with it. Our objects may be timeless, but the ways we speak about them are not. But precisely which words are these? And, more importantly, why are particular words understood as derogatory or offensive, and by whom? These questions, as we have experienced in our museum practice, often don’t have easy answers. Therefore, the museum felt that it needed to offer exhibition makers, curators, marketers and educators more guidance on word use. As a result, "Words Matter" includes a list of words, an explanation of why a particular word is considered sensitive or contested, and alternative terms that may be used in our museum practice.

Background

Recent controversy in the Netherlands surrounding whether museums should change the titles of some of their paintings and refrain from using discriminatory words in wall texts or catalogues is in part the lead up to this publication. The emotionally and politically charged nature of discussions in the media surrounding the proposed changes should persuade anyone in doubt that words matter, that language matters. This is not an issue for just a small group of experts, but it is ongoing dialogue between colleagues, neighbors, strangers and friends. It is a discussion that is embedded in a larger societal dialogue that debates issues of citizenship, belonging and representation in The Netherlands and beyond. In fact, when working with ethnographic collections today, one is always aware of the shadows of colonial categories and the critiques of words (and images) long held by those we try to represent. Indeed, it is not just words that matter: the perspectives or the position from which one writes or displays also matters. In this context, it is important to interrogate our personal and institutional relationships to categories, terminologies and meanings. To whom does language belong? In what ways can language become more inclusive to those who have been marginalized or excluded within our societies and institutions? Who is included in or excluded from ‘modern’, 'non-Western’, ‘traditional’, ‘us’ and ‘them’? Is disability the right term to use to describe people who are differently-abled? And what is the correct pronoun to describe someone who self-identifies as transgender? The publication "Words Matter" is the physical manifestation of the museum’s long-term commitment to becoming a more inclusive institution and is the result of multiple, long-term projects that aim to dissect and dismantle some of the complex contested words, stereotypes and concepts that are present not only in cultural institutions, but also the media and society at large.

Further information

Words Matter: An Unfinished Guide to Word Choices in the Cultural Sector can be downloaded for free at https://www.materialculture.nl/en/publications/words-matter