New expectations for understanding the new regulations of the National Museum, "wearing slippers and refusing entry" cultural relics | Prohibited | New regulations
Individuals with disheveled appearance are not allowed to enter the museum. Non visiting activities such as lectures, performances, interviews, commercial filming, self media live broadcasts, and recordings are prohibited without approval. Recently, the China International Import Expo has issued a notice, some of which have sparked heated discussions. Previously, Guobo also requested restrictions on unauthorized teaching activities. The new regulations of the Forbidden City, which came into effect on June 30th this year, also explicitly prohibit commercial filming. Renowned museums and exhibition halls are raising "guardrails" one after another, which is worth pondering.
Stricter terms and finer regulations also raise questions about whether they are too strict and whether there is freedom to visit. The weather is hot, wearing slippers is not enough to go to the National Expo? I really like the grandeur of the Forbidden City. Why can't I hire a professional photographer to take a big picture of ancient costumes for me? This kind of question is understandable for individual visitors. However, for special venues such as the Forbidden City and the National Museum, where there is a large flow of people, precious cultural relics are exhibited, and even cultural relics themselves, the unrestricted "freedom" may bring unbearable pain.
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Viewing history and cultural relics is fundamentally different from general leisure and entertainment activities such as night markets, and ensuring a certain order is particularly crucial. When visiting, if someone occupies the best viewing spot for precious cultural relics for a long time, doing live broadcasts or filming big films, causing noise and noise, it will inevitably affect other tourists. Especially for places with limited space or precious cultural relics themselves, various shooting equipment is more likely to cause irreversible damage to cultural relics, and even collide or scratch other tourists. Especially, the actual situation in our country is that the passenger flow of well-known museums and exhibition halls is often high, which poses greater challenges to management and maintenance. More meticulous management, more comprehensive consideration, and sometimes even stricter measures are necessary to protect cultural relics and maintain order, while maximizing the satisfaction of more tourists and achieving a balance between the interests and demands of all parties.
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History is serious, cultural relics are solemn. It should be noted that the new regulations of the Forbidden City and the National Museum not only consider the viewing order in reality, but also the "spiritual order" and "emotional order" in dealing with history and cultural relics. Require visitors to avoid inappropriate attire based on the nature of public places such as museums; Prohibit non-standard explanations and avoid making "jokes" or "unofficial histories" for the sake of traffic... Similar regulations aim to give due respect to the most precious history and culture of a nation carried by cultural relics. Almost all countries around the world have set a high threshold for visiting representative historical and cultural heritage sites. This is not to exclude anyone, but often represents a nation's attitude towards history and civilization.
Some people say that if you want to see how high a country's civilization level is, you can go and visit its museum. This refers to both the collections in the museum and the quality and behavior of museum visitors. Nowadays, we are gradually bidding farewell to general uncivilized behaviors such as "spitting everywhere", "visiting here", and "littering". Let's move towards a direction with higher requirements for "civilization".