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Mediating and negotiating culture in an art museumDent, Sandra 05 1900 (has links)
Cross cultural education in art museums is an interesting and complex issue.
While cultural exhibitions have received attention in research, studies have usually
focused on the nature of the exhibitions and have not explored the audience's
understanding about culture in relationship to the exhibition.
This qualitative study explores how and what First Nations cultures have been
mediated by a civic art museum and negotiated by the museum audience, and the
relationship between the two. Observations of the exhibition and audience and
interviews with 99 adults in the museum were collected and analyzed to identify patterns
and relationships. Analysis of the exhibition found the mediation of culture was
distinguished by a partnership of the museum and First Nations cultures which reflected
both their languages and voices. Audience responses illustrated a range of affective,
factual and conceptual responses. Positive affective responses reflected the stimulation
and satisfaction with learning which occurred. Visitors indicated enlightenment, exposure
and revision of previously held ideas and assumptions, similarities and differences among
cultures, and insight into perspectives of others.
Partnership between the museum and the exhibition of masks from Northwest
First Nations cultures is seen as a complex undertaking requiring reflection and
examination of these two cultures. Visitor responses to the exhibition indicates learning,
thinking and innumerable ways individuals construct meanings and understanding from
art museum experiences.
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Mediating and negotiating culture in an art museumDent, Sandra 05 1900 (has links)
Cross cultural education in art museums is an interesting and complex issue.
While cultural exhibitions have received attention in research, studies have usually
focused on the nature of the exhibitions and have not explored the audience's
understanding about culture in relationship to the exhibition.
This qualitative study explores how and what First Nations cultures have been
mediated by a civic art museum and negotiated by the museum audience, and the
relationship between the two. Observations of the exhibition and audience and
interviews with 99 adults in the museum were collected and analyzed to identify patterns
and relationships. Analysis of the exhibition found the mediation of culture was
distinguished by a partnership of the museum and First Nations cultures which reflected
both their languages and voices. Audience responses illustrated a range of affective,
factual and conceptual responses. Positive affective responses reflected the stimulation
and satisfaction with learning which occurred. Visitors indicated enlightenment, exposure
and revision of previously held ideas and assumptions, similarities and differences among
cultures, and insight into perspectives of others.
Partnership between the museum and the exhibition of masks from Northwest
First Nations cultures is seen as a complex undertaking requiring reflection and
examination of these two cultures. Visitor responses to the exhibition indicates learning,
thinking and innumerable ways individuals construct meanings and understanding from
art museum experiences. / Education, Faculty of / Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of / Graduate
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Identities, memories, histories and representation : the role of museums in twentieth century KwaZulu-Natal.Dlamuka, Mxolisi Chrisostomas. January 2003 (has links)
The history of museums in South Africa dates back to 1825 when the South African
Museum (SAM) was established in Cape Town. Initially museums in South Africa were
established for science and local history was seen as peripheral. Nevertheless, this began
to change during the early 1920s as artifacts of historical nature gained popularity, saving
them from historical oblivion in museums. Museums themselves broadened their role to
become major centres of both scientific and historical knowledge.
When museums started to include historical artifacts, they entered a terrain which was
influenced by a racist ideology of segregation and then apartheid. Thus, they became
centres of political discourse and mirrors of the white domination in South Africa. From
the 1920s museums served to propagate certain myths which was based on the subjugation
of Africans by white settlers. Museums played a pivotal role in entrenching ideas of white
settlement in Natal as a triumph over barbarism, savage and heathenism. Exhibitions
within the museums reflected certain identities at the expense of others. It was not until the
1980s that the political scenario forced museums to examine their role and adapt to the
new order. This marked the beginning of a new dispensation in the politics and poetics of
museum displaying. During the 1990s issues of representation in museums became
popular. Historians were among those who became interested in the question of how to
represent the South African a turbulent past in a post apartheid South Africa. This era was
characterized by new displays which are more accommodative and represent diverse
population groups of South Africa.
Exhibitions in museums always involve political ramifications and ideas within
exhibitions draw reference to the powerful groups in the making of political and social
discourse. During the post- apartheid era, KwaZulu-Natal museums reflect new identities
which are based on non-racialism and interaction of diverse people of the province. They
no longer serve as reference point for white domination and educational programmes are
more multidimensional and appeal to all sectors of our society. The thesis adopted in this
piece of work is that museums are political institutions and reflect the political identities of
the society that they live. They cannot be divorced from their time and circumstances. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of Durban-Westville, 2003.
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Le musée et l'art contemporain: contribution à la sociologie de la médiation artistique à l'ère post-moderneVander Gucht, Daniel January 1994 (has links)
Doctorat en sciences sociales, politiques et économiques / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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Olfaction and Exhibition: Assessing the Impact of Scent in Museums on Exhibit Engagement, Learning and EmpathyUnknown Date (has links)
The aim of this investigation is to analyze the effects of incorporating scent-based elements in ethnographic exhibits. Specifically, it attempts to identify changes in patron response to a visual display, with and without a scent element. Groups of patrons were observed throughout their engagement with the exhibit, and interviewed post-engagement to generate data on information retention, opinion on content and empathetic response in relation to the exhibit. Findings suggest that the inclusion of scent did increase memorization of the limited facts reinforced through the scent element. However, there was no detectable difference between the groups on measures of overall comprehension of the subject matter, nor their empathetic responses toward the exhibited culture. The results of the study are discussed as a measure of the observer—observed dichotomy, and the argument is made that multisensory representation in the museum can aid in the facilitation of cross-cultural education. / Includes bibliography. / Thesis (M.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2017. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
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Construction and representation of identities in football museums : a comparative studyYang, Jing January 2015 (has links)
This thesis aims at providing a cross-cultural study of how football museums represent and construct identities, both collective and personal. The research is based on a multi-sited ethnography at selected football museums in the UK, Germany, and China, employing participant observation, photographic recording and online research methods. This investigation sharpens an anthropological awareness of constructions of multiple layered identities by examining football museums' exhibiting practices and activity programmes, as well as their built environments and cultural settings. The research also offers a perspective on museum visitors, who consume football museums with diverse personal and collective identity claims. Looking into the largely under-explored terrain of football museums, this research joins continuing anthropological efforts to understand identity work while also exploring continuing tensions inherent in a marriage between museums and football. The thesis contributes to the research field of football/sports museums with an ethnographic emphasis and a cross-cultural range.
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Dr. Soanes' Odditorium of Wonders : the 19th century dime museum in a contemporary contextEdmundson, Jane, University of Lethbridge. Faculty of Fine Arts January 2013 (has links)
19th century dime museums were a North American phenomenon that flourished in urban
centres from the mid- to late-1800s. Named thusly due to their low admission cost, dime
museums provided democratic entertainment that was promoted to all classes as
affordable and respectable. The resulting facilities were crammed with art, artifacts,
rarities, living human curiosities, theatre performances, menageries, and technological
marvels. The exhibition Dr. Soanes’ Odditorium of Wonders strives to recapture the spirit
and aesthetic of the dime museum to invoke wonder in the viewer and to combine art,
artifacts, and oddities to provoke questions about the boundary between education and
amusement. Both the academic and curatorial texts utilize a mix of methodological
approaches appropriate to museology, art history and cultural history: theoretical research
into historiographical issues concerning theories of display and spectacle; archival
research and discourse analysis of historical documents, and material culture analysis
(including the semiotics of display). / iv, 60 leaves : ill. ; 29 cm
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