Anthropology 316MU - Anthropology in/of Museums

Spring
2019
01
4.00
Sabra Thorner
M 01:30PM-04:20PM
Mount Holyoke College
106466
Clapp Laboratory 126
sthorner@mtholyoke.edu
What is a museum, and how is it relevant to all of our lives? This course considers "the museum" as an object of ethnographic inquiry, examining it as a cultural institution perpetually under negotiation and reconfiguration. We reflect on how museum principles of classification, practices of collection and exhibition, and the uptake of digital technologies are central to what and how we know. We investigate and analyze museums as social actors in anthropological debates on power, representation, materiality, value, authenticity, state-making, Indigenous sovereignty, and the preservation and activation of contemporary cultures. The museum is never simply a repository of artifacts, artworks, histories, or scientific inventions, but also a site of tremendous creativity and a field of complex social relations.
Prereq: 4 credits in Anthropology.
Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.