Il museo di antropologia come museo culturale: il caso del MOA di Vancouver

This essay will examine anthropology museums as cultural museums from the methodological approach of Cultural Studies. Within this frame, the museum acts as a mode of conservation of material culture thus revealing its immaterial consequences. In the museum, historical memories are preserved and re-...

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Main Author: Claudia Gualtieri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Università degli Studi di Milano 2011-03-01
Series:Altre Modernità
Subjects:
Online Access:https://riviste.unimi.it/index.php/AMonline/article/view/1028
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spelling doaj-37e595665f2f4b34a4153ff532a718832020-11-25T01:56:48ZengUniversità degli Studi di MilanoAltre Modernità2035-76802011-03-0105455910.13130/2035-7680/1028963Il museo di antropologia come museo culturale: il caso del MOA di VancouverClaudia Gualtieri0Università degli Studi di MilanoThis essay will examine anthropology museums as cultural museums from the methodological approach of Cultural Studies. Within this frame, the museum acts as a mode of conservation of material culture thus revealing its immaterial consequences. In the museum, historical memories are preserved and re-enacted to articulate cultural identities in the present, to shed light on the past, and to illuminate future communal practices. After a brief survey on collections in the epoch of European geographical discoveries and on the birth of anthropology as a science in colonial times, the essay will consider the exhibition of cultural artefacts belonging to the First Nations of British Columbia in the Museum of Anthropology (MOA) in Vancouver. References to native land claims will help to understand the links between time and place, history and geography, cultural memory and land that are central to native re-constructions of identity. Through a critical reading of conventional ethnographic and anthropological criteria in museum displays, the codes of conservation and repatriation will be introduced in relation to the notion of native title and cultural property. The MOA will be used as a case in point to explore practices of negotiation with native peoples. The indigenous worldview regarding the use of objects and the performance of a living culture will be presented as opposed to the conventional aesthetic appreciation and exhibition of cultural objects. The essay will then illustrate how museums are produced and organised according to ideologically relevant standpoints in specific times and places, and how visitor-oriented practices should address a critical reading of dynamics of power and knowledge control in contemporary societies.https://riviste.unimi.it/index.php/AMonline/article/view/1028CanadaFirst Nationsoggetto materialeconservazionerestituzioneproprietà culturaleperformance.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Claudia Gualtieri
spellingShingle Claudia Gualtieri
Il museo di antropologia come museo culturale: il caso del MOA di Vancouver
Altre Modernità
Canada
First Nations
oggetto materiale
conservazione
restituzione
proprietà culturale
performance.
author_facet Claudia Gualtieri
author_sort Claudia Gualtieri
title Il museo di antropologia come museo culturale: il caso del MOA di Vancouver
title_short Il museo di antropologia come museo culturale: il caso del MOA di Vancouver
title_full Il museo di antropologia come museo culturale: il caso del MOA di Vancouver
title_fullStr Il museo di antropologia come museo culturale: il caso del MOA di Vancouver
title_full_unstemmed Il museo di antropologia come museo culturale: il caso del MOA di Vancouver
title_sort il museo di antropologia come museo culturale: il caso del moa di vancouver
publisher Università degli Studi di Milano
series Altre Modernità
issn 2035-7680
publishDate 2011-03-01
description This essay will examine anthropology museums as cultural museums from the methodological approach of Cultural Studies. Within this frame, the museum acts as a mode of conservation of material culture thus revealing its immaterial consequences. In the museum, historical memories are preserved and re-enacted to articulate cultural identities in the present, to shed light on the past, and to illuminate future communal practices. After a brief survey on collections in the epoch of European geographical discoveries and on the birth of anthropology as a science in colonial times, the essay will consider the exhibition of cultural artefacts belonging to the First Nations of British Columbia in the Museum of Anthropology (MOA) in Vancouver. References to native land claims will help to understand the links between time and place, history and geography, cultural memory and land that are central to native re-constructions of identity. Through a critical reading of conventional ethnographic and anthropological criteria in museum displays, the codes of conservation and repatriation will be introduced in relation to the notion of native title and cultural property. The MOA will be used as a case in point to explore practices of negotiation with native peoples. The indigenous worldview regarding the use of objects and the performance of a living culture will be presented as opposed to the conventional aesthetic appreciation and exhibition of cultural objects. The essay will then illustrate how museums are produced and organised according to ideologically relevant standpoints in specific times and places, and how visitor-oriented practices should address a critical reading of dynamics of power and knowledge control in contemporary societies.
topic Canada
First Nations
oggetto materiale
conservazione
restituzione
proprietà culturale
performance.
url https://riviste.unimi.it/index.php/AMonline/article/view/1028
work_keys_str_mv AT claudiagualtieri ilmuseodiantropologiacomemuseoculturaleilcasodelmoadivancouver
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