Narratives of Vulnerability in Museums

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A01=Meighen Katz
America
American
American Great Depression
American history
Art
Author_Meighen Katz
Category=GLZ
Category=NHK
CIO
CIO Union
cultural memory research
Depression
Discourse
Dubious Battle
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Exhibition
Farm Security Administration
Fear
Federal Arts Projects
Federal Music Project
Federal Theatre
Federal Theatre Project
Flint Strike
FSA
FSA Image
FSA Photograph
FSA Photographer
Great Depression
Heritage
heritage interpretation
History
House Museum
Interpretation
interwar America
Katz
Living Newspapers
Lower East Side Tenement Museum
Merseyside Maritime Museum
Migrant Mother
Museum
museum studies
museums
Narratives
narratives of vulnerability
Open Road
Public
public narrative
Resilience
resilience theory
social history exhibitions
Society
Steinbeck's Work
Steinbeck’s Work
Stereotypical Black Characters
Technology
Tenement Museum
Uncertainty
Vulnerability
vulnerability in public history practice
Women's Unique Experiences
Women’s Unique Experiences
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367727529
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Narratives of Vulnerability in Museums is a study of the challenges museums face when they present narratives of instability, uncertainty, and fear in their exhibitions. As a period of sustained societal and personal vulnerability, the Great Depression remains a watershed era in American history. It is an era when iconic visual culture of deprivation mixes in the popular imagination with groundbreaking government policy and has immense potential for museums, but this is accompanied by significant challenges. Analysing a range of case studies, the book explores both the successes and obstacles involved in translating historical narratives of vulnerability to the exhibition floor.

Incorporating an innovative, trans-genre museological model, the book draws connections between exhibitions of history, art, and technology, as well as heritage sites, focused on a single era. Employing interpretations of housing, preserved and reconstructed, to discuss ideas of belonging and community, the book also examines the power of the iconic national story and the struggle for local relevance through discussions on strikes and industrial action. Finally, it examines the use of fine art in history exhibitions to access the emotional aspects of historical experience. The result is a volume that considers both how societies talk about less celebratory aspects of history, but also the expectations placed on museums as interpreters of the public narrative and agents of change.

Narratives of Vulnerability in Museums makes a significant contribution to discourses of museum and heritage studies, of interwar history, of the social role of cultural institutions, and to vulnerability and resilience studies. As such, it should be essential reading for scholars and students working in these disciplines, as well as architecture, cultural studies, and human geography.

Meighen Katz has lectured at the University of Melbourne, the Australian Catholic University, and Deakin University; she contributed to exhibitions at Museum Victoria; and she was the 2016 Grimwade Curator at the Ian Potter Museum of Art. She holds a PhD from Monash University and is a founding partner of Present Past Consulting Historians.

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