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Museum Theory


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(Message 2006; Newman and Selwood 2008).

      Current museum studies approaches continue to be influenced by concerns about social justice and community building, as well as by public policy-oriented approaches. The recent period might be understood as representing a third phase of museum studies which brings together but also challenges previous ways of understanding museums and their relationship to society and the governance of such. However, despite its concern with cultural processes on the one hand, and its engagement with politics on the other hand, this phase continues to struggle with how to identify and then conduct research at the actual interface between politics and museums. This struggle might be understood in some respects as itself being a productive outcome reflective of cultural processes. However, it has also created a disciplinary gap that has contributed to the argument that culture and the arts form an example of minor politics that is of low priority in the realm of political decision-making (Gray 2011).

      In addition to being developed in and in relation to the high-profile history and culture wars playing out in the public sphere, the new museology developed out of a strong commitment by museum scholars to theoretical ideas gaining popularity through the period. The new museology’s primarily political and theoretical orientation was directly influenced by the 1989 publication of The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere by Habermas (1989), and other key critical theory texts of the period (e.g., Foucault 1974; 1977, 1989; Bourdieu and Darbel 1991). Although, on reflection, the new museology may have overemphasized its alignment with disciplinarity and academic discourse over or even at the expense of practice, its intentions were, for the most part, to bring theoretical insights into practice (Vergo 1989; Macdonald and Fyfe 1996; Macdonald 2002). Indeed, many proponents of the new museology, particularly those seeking to empower source communities through collaborative projects, presented this reunification as a serious political project and goal for their work (e.g., Clifford 1997; Witcomb 2003).

      The new museology’s aim to link theory and practice is evident (even if not fully realized or accomplished) in a large number of publications from the period. In her review of one representative anthology of the time, Theorizing Museums: Representing Identity and Diversity in a Changing World (Macdonald and Fyfe 1996), Nancy J. Parezo from Arizona State Museum commented on the complexity and tensions arising from this aspiration as well as the increasing separation between museum work and the discipline of anthropology. In a piece that effectively rehearsed the concerns raised by Thomas (at the outset of this Introduction), Parezo argued that the distinction and divisions may be counteracted where disciplinary and practice-based approaches are addressed in a shared context and con-versation. As examples of this kind of work, Parezo cites the “richly theorized works” published in Museum Anthropology through the 1990s, that

      raise issues that are of importance to anthropology in that they deal with how research is conducted and its results are disseminated and how the peoples with whom we work are to be fully integrated into anthropological endeavours and discourse–in short, with the basic production, dissemination, and use ethics of anthropological knowledge. (Parezo 1998, 183)

      It is an argument also made by Lynn Meskell (2009) in relation to the relationships between archaeological work and the field of heritage studies.

      Overview

      The challenge we set for contributors to this volume was twofold. First, we wanted to devise a volume that would encourage conversation across the categories outlined by Parezo and across the distinctions proposed by Thomas. Second, we wanted to avoid the problem of a volume on museum theory being relentlessly concerned with the museum in general from the perspective of externally derived and high-level forms of abstraction. While we did not want to neglect this kind of theorizing altogether, we wanted to find a structure that enabled other kinds of theorizing to emerge. The details of this approach and how it has panned out through the volume are detailed in a following section, but included asking scholars from other disciplinary and theoretical fields to write about museums, and asking museum professionals to address the conditions for (and resistance to) theoretical reflexivity in the museum. As such, the volume represents an attempt to move beyond theoretically driven analyses of museums toward a situated form of theorizing about museums. Our starting point was to invite chapters that would theorize relationships between museums, knowledge, and experience and to devise a collection that would open up dialogue between museums and the academy, and probe links between museum studies and other disciplinary formations (such as cultural studies, art history, anthropology, natural history, and history) in ways that speak to the opportunities such conversations have both to theorize museums and also to use museums to do theoretical work.

      Our editorial approach, then, has been to invite contributions that identify and probe specific kinds of conjunctures and points of praxis, rather than those that would interpret museums from the vantage point of particular theoretical frame-works, one after another. We are interested in the idea of the conjuncture and, by association, of “conjunctural knowledge” as that which is “situated in, and applica-ble to, specific and immediate political or historical circumstances; as well as an awareness that the structures of representations which form culture’s alphabet and grammar are instruments of social power, requiring critical and activist examina-tion” (During 1993, 97). This approach speaks effectively to the types of moments that the book presents, where constituents and collaborators (let alone museum professionals and other stakeholders) do not permit the theory or abstraction or traditions of detached critical distance to avoid the need to understand the felt specificities of the historical and contemporary empirical conditions pertinent to their museums.