Museum Theory. Группа авторов
href="#ulink_ff17a023-3543-54b0-9ddf-d62e0fc2fa99">References 17. THE LIQUID MUSEUM: New Institutional Ontologies for a Complex, Uncertain World Dynamical forces and the liquid museum Temporal reframing Uncertainty Complexity and nonlinearity The transnationalizing effects of climate change andglobalization Reworking the human and the social: Nature cultures Becoming liquid Museums as complex adaptive systems The liquid museum: A strategic simplification Museums as assemblage convertors Conclusion Note References
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PART III: Theory from Practice/Practicing Theory
18. THE DISPLACED LOCAL: Multiple Agency in the Building of Museums’ Ethnographic Collections
A brief revisionist perspective on the building of ethnographic collections
Reflecting back from Australia
Making Yolngu collections
Collections as distributed memory
A favorable conjunction of interests
Reflecting back
Baldwin Spencer
Alfred Haddon
The producers’ perspective
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Notes
References
19. THE WORLD AS COLLECTED; OR, MUSEUM COLLECTIONS AS SITUATED MATERIALITIES
Zombies of anatomy
The other way around
Collections as situated materialities
Strategic omissions, hidden associations
The nation collected
Bodies of us and them as collected
Old and new worlds collected, or strategic resituatings
Acknowledgments
References
20. AMBIENT AESTHETICS: Altered Subjectivities in the New Museum
Cultures of distraction
The new museum
The Australian Centre for the Moving Image as “new”
The Screen Gallery
Ambient space
Play and pedagogy
Conclusion
References
21. MUSEUM ENCOUNTERS AND NARRATIVE ENGAGEMENTS
Background: Museums, visitors, and meanings
Theoretical framework: Interpretive engagements as narrative meanings
Translating theory into methodology: Narrative interviews at Te Papa
Narrative engagements and cross–cultural meanings
Conclusion
Notes
References
22. THEORIZING MUSEUM AND HERITAGE VISITING
Heritage as a performance
Museums and the three Ls: Learning and lifelong learning
Methodology
Commemorating and learning a forgotten history: The 1807 bicentenary of the British abolition of the slave trade
Reinforcing and confirming: Museums and the performance of self
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Notes
References
23. THE MUSEUM IN HIDING: Framing Conflict
Lyndell Brown and Charles Green
Amelia Barikin
References
24. PRESERVING/SHAPING/CREATING: Museums and Public Memory in a Time of Loss
Museums in contemporary life
Preserving/shaping/creating the public memory of September 11
Note
References