Decolonising the Museum: The Case of the Imperial and Commonwealth Institutes

This article investigates the relationship between museums and decolonisation in the under-examined middle years of the twentieth century (c. 1945-1970). Focusing on London’s Imperial Institute and its successor, the Commonwealth Institute, it argues that material culture and museums not only reflec...

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Main Author: Claire Wintle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Leicester 2013-07-01
Series:Museum & Society
Online Access:https://journals.le.ac.uk/ojs1/index.php/mas/article/view/232
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spelling doaj-81b1e12927f346879c2d601d2909851f2020-11-24T22:17:46ZengUniversity of LeicesterMuseum & Society1479-83602013-07-01112185201221Decolonising the Museum: The Case of the Imperial and Commonwealth InstitutesClaire WintleThis article investigates the relationship between museums and decolonisation in the under-examined middle years of the twentieth century (c. 1945-1970). Focusing on London’s Imperial Institute and its successor, the Commonwealth Institute, it argues that material culture and museums not only reflected wider political change, but exercised agency on processes of decolonisation. Museums helped multiple stakeholders in both metropole and (ex)colony to trial and enact forms of decolonisation, neo-colonialism, independence and anti-colonial resistance and acted as microcosms of wider political encounters: the practices of display and acquisition allowed the subjects of a crumbling empire to retain a sense of control over the process of decolonisation, but importantly they also provided an arena for emerging powers from the former colonies to assert their own agendas and forced staff at such institutions to take this influence seriously. Drawing on extensive archival material representing the perspectives of the Institutes’ staff and their contacts in decolonising countries across the Commonwealth, the tensions, collaborations and ambivalence inherent in the relationship between museums and the high politics of decolonisation are explored.https://journals.le.ac.uk/ojs1/index.php/mas/article/view/232
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Claire Wintle
spellingShingle Claire Wintle
Decolonising the Museum: The Case of the Imperial and Commonwealth Institutes
Museum & Society
author_facet Claire Wintle
author_sort Claire Wintle
title Decolonising the Museum: The Case of the Imperial and Commonwealth Institutes
title_short Decolonising the Museum: The Case of the Imperial and Commonwealth Institutes
title_full Decolonising the Museum: The Case of the Imperial and Commonwealth Institutes
title_fullStr Decolonising the Museum: The Case of the Imperial and Commonwealth Institutes
title_full_unstemmed Decolonising the Museum: The Case of the Imperial and Commonwealth Institutes
title_sort decolonising the museum: the case of the imperial and commonwealth institutes
publisher University of Leicester
series Museum & Society
issn 1479-8360
publishDate 2013-07-01
description This article investigates the relationship between museums and decolonisation in the under-examined middle years of the twentieth century (c. 1945-1970). Focusing on London’s Imperial Institute and its successor, the Commonwealth Institute, it argues that material culture and museums not only reflected wider political change, but exercised agency on processes of decolonisation. Museums helped multiple stakeholders in both metropole and (ex)colony to trial and enact forms of decolonisation, neo-colonialism, independence and anti-colonial resistance and acted as microcosms of wider political encounters: the practices of display and acquisition allowed the subjects of a crumbling empire to retain a sense of control over the process of decolonisation, but importantly they also provided an arena for emerging powers from the former colonies to assert their own agendas and forced staff at such institutions to take this influence seriously. Drawing on extensive archival material representing the perspectives of the Institutes’ staff and their contacts in decolonising countries across the Commonwealth, the tensions, collaborations and ambivalence inherent in the relationship between museums and the high politics of decolonisation are explored.
url https://journals.le.ac.uk/ojs1/index.php/mas/article/view/232
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