Conservation in Museums and Inclusion of the Non-Professional

Just as object meanings are defined by people, so too can identities of individuals, groups and communities be implicit in their relationships with particular objects. The transformative quality of the museum environment and display formats, with regard to objects and object relationships, is fundam...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jill Saunders
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2014-06-01
Series:Journal of Conservation and Museum Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jcms-journal.com/articles/71
id doaj-bcbdf4345c684af5a6565fee097a9315
record_format Article
spelling doaj-bcbdf4345c684af5a6565fee097a93152020-11-24T23:03:49ZengUbiquity PressJournal of Conservation and Museum Studies2049-45721364-04292014-06-0112110.5334/jcms.102121564Conservation in Museums and Inclusion of the Non-ProfessionalJill Saunders0UCL-QatarJust as object meanings are defined by people, so too can identities of individuals, groups and communities be implicit in their relationships with particular objects. The transformative quality of the museum environment and display formats, with regard to objects and object relationships, is fundamental to the socio-cultural responsibilities of these institutions and their ability to affect social issues. To understand the potential utility of heritage conservation in this respect, it is necessary to explore the complexity of the relationships that can form between objects and people and so establish some key issues and implications of conservation activities. This paper first addresses the role of materiality and material interactions in the construction and communication of identity aspects, and considers professional conservation with regard to these relationships. It will be shown that material interactions can have great significance concerning identity and that the subjectivity of object values is a key issue in the conservation of material heritage. It will be seen that though the management of heritage can be problematic, the resonance of heritage status gives museums a unique capacity for addressing both intangible and tangible social needs.http://www.jcms-journal.com/articles/71conservationmaterialityidentitysocial inclusionmuseologymuseummuseum object
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jill Saunders
spellingShingle Jill Saunders
Conservation in Museums and Inclusion of the Non-Professional
Journal of Conservation and Museum Studies
conservation
materiality
identity
social inclusion
museology
museum
museum object
author_facet Jill Saunders
author_sort Jill Saunders
title Conservation in Museums and Inclusion of the Non-Professional
title_short Conservation in Museums and Inclusion of the Non-Professional
title_full Conservation in Museums and Inclusion of the Non-Professional
title_fullStr Conservation in Museums and Inclusion of the Non-Professional
title_full_unstemmed Conservation in Museums and Inclusion of the Non-Professional
title_sort conservation in museums and inclusion of the non-professional
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Journal of Conservation and Museum Studies
issn 2049-4572
1364-0429
publishDate 2014-06-01
description Just as object meanings are defined by people, so too can identities of individuals, groups and communities be implicit in their relationships with particular objects. The transformative quality of the museum environment and display formats, with regard to objects and object relationships, is fundamental to the socio-cultural responsibilities of these institutions and their ability to affect social issues. To understand the potential utility of heritage conservation in this respect, it is necessary to explore the complexity of the relationships that can form between objects and people and so establish some key issues and implications of conservation activities. This paper first addresses the role of materiality and material interactions in the construction and communication of identity aspects, and considers professional conservation with regard to these relationships. It will be shown that material interactions can have great significance concerning identity and that the subjectivity of object values is a key issue in the conservation of material heritage. It will be seen that though the management of heritage can be problematic, the resonance of heritage status gives museums a unique capacity for addressing both intangible and tangible social needs.
topic conservation
materiality
identity
social inclusion
museology
museum
museum object
url http://www.jcms-journal.com/articles/71
work_keys_str_mv AT jillsaunders conservationinmuseumsandinclusionofthenonprofessional
_version_ 1725631835540553728