Bronwyn Labrum
Search for other papers by Bronwyn Labrum in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
Collecting, curating and exhibiting cross-cultural material histories in a post-settler society
in Curatopia
Abstract only
Log-in for full text

This chapter considers social history in a postcolonial contest. It specifically examines how the history of the majority culture in a post-settler society has been and might be curated. Using Aotearoa New Zealand as its case study, it considers the figure of the Pākehā (non-indigenous) curator in relation to, and also in contrast with, Indigenous collections and displays. What does a history curator look like in a post-settler society? Does the history curator continue the mutual asymmetry that has characterised relations and curatorial endeavours? Or is there a way to recognise cross-cultural material histories? In considering the development of history, and specifically social history, it suggests that a more useful concept is material history, rather than historical material cultures studies. The rest of the chapter ranges across a broad range of material history, including fashion and clothing, and design, to consider how contemporary museums deal with everyday life and its material aspects in museums, which are still to a large extent focused on discrete objects and forms of material culture, and which carry the burden of the historical development of their collections into a post-settler world.

  • Collapse
  • Expand

Curatopia

Museums and the future of curatorship

Metrics

All Time Past Year Past 30 Days
Abstract Views 202 20 0
Full Text Views 42 1 0
PDF Downloads 6 1 0