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New Museum Theory and Practice is an original collection of essays with a unique focus: the contested politics and ideologies of museum exhibition.
Contains 12 original essays that contribute to the field while creating a collective whole for course use.
Discusses theory through vivid examples and historical overviews.
Offers guidance on how to put theory into practice.
Covers a range of museums around the world: from art to history, anthropology to music, as well as historic houses, cultural centres, virtual sites, and commercial displays that use the conventions of the museum.
Authors come from the UK, Canada, the US, and Australia, and from a variety of fields that inform cultural studies.
This is an ambitious book, setting out as it does to explore the gamut of new museum theory and practice. The essays in this book are diverse, but together they suggest virtually all of the recent major intellectual and political shifts within the museum world. (
Museum Anthropology, Summer 2008)
This book is inspiring and ... offers an excellent vision of why and how the museum will matter more in the 21st century. (Muse)
List of Figures viii
Preface: How to Use this Book x
Acknowledgments xii
Introduction 1 Janet Marstine
Part I Defining New Museum Theory 37
A Surveys and Groundwork 39
1 Editor s Introduction 41
THE ARCHITECTURE IS THE MUSEUM 41 Michaela Giebelhausen
Questions for Discussion 60
2 Editor s Introduction 64
FEMINIST CURATORIAL STRATEGIES AND PRACTICES SINCE THE 1970s 65 Katy Deepwell
Questions for Discussion 80
3 Editor s Introduction 85
NEW ART, NEW CHALLENGES: THE CHANGING FACE OF CONSERVATION IN THE TWENTY–FIRST CENTURY 86 Rachel Barker and Patricia Smithen
Questions for Discussion 103
B Case Studies in Contemporary Practice 107
4 Editor s Introduction 109
HOW WE STUDY HISTORY MUSEUMS: OR CULTURAL STUDIES AT MONTICELLO 109 Eric Gable
Questions for Discussion 126
5 Editor s Introduction 129
SPECTACLE AND DEMOCRACY: EXPERIENCE MUSIC PROJECT AS A POST–MUSEUM 130 Chris Bruce
Questions for Discussion 149
6 Editor s Introduction 152
REVEALING AND CONCEALING: MUSEUMS, OBJECTS, AND THE TRANSMISSION OF KNOWLEDGE IN ABORIGINAL AUSTRALIA 153 Moira G. Simpson
Questions for Discussion 174
7 Editor s Introduction 178
RESTRUCTURING SOUTH AFRICAN MUSEUMS: REALITY AND RHETORIC WITHIN CAPE TOWN 179 Julie L. McGee
Questions for Discussion 196
Part II Looking to the Future: Theory into Practice 201
8 Editor s Introduction 203
THE CRITICAL MUSEUM VISITOR 203 Margaret Lindauer
Questions for Discussion 223
9 Editor s Introduction 226
VISITING THE VIRTUAL MUSEUM: ART AND EXPERIENCE ONLINE 226 Lianne McTavish
Questions for Discussion 244
10 Editor s Introduction 247
REFRAMING STUDIO ART PRODUCTION AND CRITIQUE 248 Helen Klebesadel
Questions for Discussion 263
11 Editor s Introduction 266
THE UNIVERSITY MUSEUM AND GALLERY: A SITE FOR INSTITUTIONAL CRITIQUE AND A FOCUS OF THE CURRICULUM 267 Lyndel King and Janet Marstine
Questions for Discussion 288
12 Editor s Introduction 292
MUSEUM ARCHIVES AS RESOURCES FOR SCHOLARLY RESEARCH AND INSTITUTIONAL IDENTITY 293 Lois Marie Fink
Questions for Discussion 306
Bibliography 308
Index 322
Janet Marstine is an art historian who has taught at Bowdoin College and Central Washington University. She has curated several exhibitions and is now working on new approaches to student and faculty exhibitions.
New Museum Theory and Practice is an original collection of essays with a unique focus: the contested politics and ideologies of museum practice. This lively introduction, comprised of essays authored by curators, archivists, scholars, teachers, and conservators from around the world including the Tate, the Smithsonian, and the Experience Music Project and from all levels of museum studies, examines the incendiary issues currently raging in the field. Complete with editorial introductions, questions for students, and a comprehensive bibliography, the volume surveys the concerns of the museum in language accessible to undergraduate and graduate students of art history, studio art, and museum studies.