Making History

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A01=Tim Betz
Author_Tim Betz
Category=GLZ
Category=KJM
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eq_non-fiction
Historic House Programming
Historic Houses - Technology
historic processes
Historic Sites Programming
historic trades
inclusive museum programming
intangible cultural heritage
maker movement
Makerspaces
Makerspaces in Historic Houses
Makerspaces in Historic Sites
Makerspaces in Museums
museum education
museum programming
Museum Technology

Product details

  • ISBN 9781538169018
  • Weight: 367g
  • Dimensions: 159 x 237mm
  • Publication Date: 25 May 2023
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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While first person interpretation and historic crafts have long been part of the museum world, current movements in the maker movement in libraries and schools have occurred mostly outside of the museum world. Instead, Makerspace in Museums: Hands-On History in Museums and Historic Sites shows the importance of the Maker Movement for museums and historic sites, and presents a roadmap to building, planning, researching, and using a makerspace alongside more traditional museum programming. It calls for a revitalization of living history, which can be done through makerspaces and the maker movement.
Highlights include:
Why museums and makerspaces are a natural fit togetherWays to organize and create a makerspace in a museum of any budgetCreating a makerspace and culture of making that is inclusive and for the entirety of the communityStrategies for researching historic making techniques and adapting them to the modern worldCreating meaningful makerspace-centered programming The processes and methods explored in this book will help produce a sustainable makerspace that will help the museum or historic site that adopts it reach new audiences, creating growth and new museums stakeholders. Likewise, through calling for a recalibration of living history through the language of the makerspace, this project calls for new approaches to living history. Thus, it is a call for a disruption to the status quo and a push towards sustainable and meaningful living history.

Tim Betz is a museum professional, historian, and artist. He is executive director of the Morgan Log House, a historical society in Lansdale, PA. He is an instructor of art history at Kutztown University of Pennsylvania and is completing his PhD in history at Lehigh University, in Bethlehem PA.

He is particularly interested in historic processes and historic craft, which he uses as a tool for understanding the past.

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