Skip to main content

RSHA

  • Home
  • About
  • Schools & Centres
  • People
    • Director
    • Executive
    • Professional staff
  • Study with us
    • Heritage and Museum Studies HDR Program
    • Graduate coursework
  • Events
    • Conferences
      • Past conferences
    • Past events
  • Research
    • Coombs Fellowship
    • Coombs Indigenous Fellowship
    • Coombs Fellows Archive
    • Lalor
  • News
  • Contact us

Networks

  • ANU Health Humanities Network
    • About
    • News and Events
    • Steering Group
    • Contact
  • Francophone Research Cluster
    • Publications
  • MemoryHub@ANU
    • People
      • MemoryHub Convenors
      • ANU Network Members
      • PhD Students
      • Visitors
    • Publications
    • Events
      • Symposium
      • Reading group
      • Webinars
      • Workshops
    • Contact us

Related Sites

  • ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences
  • Australian National Internships Program
  • School of Archaeology & Anthropology
  • School of Art & Design
  • School of Literature, Languages & Linguistics
  • School of Music
  • Centre for Heritage and Museum Studies
  • Humanities Research Centre
  • Institute for Communication in Health Care

Administrator

Breadcrumb

HomeUpcoming EventsCANCELLED - Where Next For UK Ethnographic Museums? Multiculturalism, Decolonisation & Repatriation
CANCELLED - Where Next for UK Ethnographic Museums? Multiculturalism, Decolonisation & Repatriation

Please note all public events are now cancelled across ANU due to the COVID-19 precautionary measures.

From its inception in the late 19th century, museum ethnography operated within a cultural evolutionary paradigm which interpreted non-European ethnographic objects and the cultures from which they originated as inferior and on the verge of extinction. Such practices continued unabated until the disintegration of European empires, assertion of civil rights and mass transnational migration in the latter half of the 20th century. As a consequence the portrayal of non-European cultures and the control of cultural patrimony in UK ethnographic museums has been politically and culturally contested. As a discipline museum ethnography has been forced to recognise these shifting socio-political paradigms and adjust its practice accordingly. Some museum ethnographers now work closely with both source and diaspora communities and recognise the importance of both tangible and intangible culture. Some have also openly and honestly acknowledged the colonial legacy of their predecessors and embarked on a process of reconciliation. However, it is questionable whether museum ethnography remains a Victorian anachronistic discipline ill-equipped to meet the needs of an increasingly multicultural and globalised world. Are colonial ethnographic collections simply triumphal reminders of an imperial past? What other reforms and innovations are necessary to ensure the survival of museum ethnography? Should it survive at all?

Date & time

  • Wed 25 Mar 2020, 12:30 pm - 1:30 pm

Location

120 McCoy Circuit

Speakers

  • Stephen Terence Welsh, Curator of Living Cultures Honorary Research Fellow in Social Anthropology University of Manchester

Contact

  •  Send email
     02 6125 0171