Mcgill-queen's University Press
Museum Pieces
About this book
The ways in which Aboriginal people and museums work together have changed drastically in recent decades. This historic process of decolonization, including distinctive attempts to institutionalize multiculturalism, has pushed Canadian museums to pioneer new practices that can accommodate both difference and inclusivity.
Ruth Phillips argues that these practices are "indigenous" not only because they originate in Aboriginal activism but because they draw on a distinctively Canadian preference for compromise and tolerance for ambiguity. Phillips dissects seminal exhibitions of Indigenous art to show how changes in display, curatorial voice, and authority stem from broad social, economic, and political forces outside the museum and moves beyond Canadian institutions and practices to discuss historically interrelated developments and exhibitions in the United States, Britain, Australia, and elsewhere. Drawing on forty years of experience as an art historian, curator, exhibition critic, and museum director, she emphasizes the complex and situated nature of the problems that face museums, introducing new perspectives on controversial exhibitions and moments of contestation.
A manifesto that calls on us to re-imagine the museum as a place to embrace global interconnectedness, Museum Pieces emphasizes the transformative power of museum controversy and analyses shifting ideas about art, authenticity, and power in the modern museum.
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Topics
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Front Matter
i -
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Contents
vii -
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Illustrations
ix -
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Acknowledgments
xiii -
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A Note on Names and Terms
xv -
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A Preface – by Way of an Introduction
3 - Confrontation and Contestation
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Undoing the Settler Museum: Showing Off and Showing Up
24 -
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“Arrow of Truth”
27 -
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Moment of Truth
48 -
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APEC at the Museum of Anthropology
71 - Re-Disciplining the Museum
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Introduction to Part Two
92 -
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How Museums Marginalize
95 -
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Fielding Culture
102 -
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Disappearing Acts
111 -
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The Global Travels of a Mi’kmaq Coat
132 - Working it Out
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Introduction to Part Three
156 -
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Making Space
161 -
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Cancelling White Noise
168 -
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Threads of the Land at the Canadian Museum of Civilization (1995)
179 -
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Toward a Dialogic Paradigm
185 -
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Inside-Out and Outside-In
205 - The Second Museum Age
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Introduction to Part Four
228 -
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From Harmony to Antiphony
231 -
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Modes of Inclusion
252 -
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The Digital (R)Evolution of Museum-Based Research
277 -
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“Learning to Feed off Controversies”
297 -
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Notes
317 -
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Index
359