Religion in Museums: Global and Multidisciplinary Perspectives
Editat de Gretchen Buggeln, Crispin Paine, S. Brent Plateen Limba Engleză Paperback – 22 feb 2017
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781474255516
ISBN-10: 1474255515
Pagini: 296
Ilustrații: 33 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1474255515
Pagini: 296
Ilustrații: 33 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Provides comprehensive coverage of 6 key areas, including overviews of the field and developing trends, as well as case studies to help support teaching
Notă biografică
Gretchen Buggeln holds the Duesenberg Chair in Christianity and the Arts at Valparaiso University, Indiana, USA. Crispin Paine is Honorary Lecturer at the Institute of Archaeology, UCL, UK. S. Brent Plate is a writer and Visiting Associate Professor of Religious Studies at Hamilton College, New York, USA.
Cuprins
Contents List of Figures List of Contributors Acknowledgements Foreword, Sally Promey (Professor of Religion and Visual Culture at the Yale Institute of Sacred Music and Professor of American Studies and Religious Studies, Yale University, USA) Introduction: Religion in Museums, Museums as Religion, Gretchen Buggeln, Crispin Paine, and S. Brent Plate Part One: Museum Buildings 1. Museum Architecture and the Sacred: Modes of Engagement, Gretchen Buggeln (Duesenberg Chair in Christianity and the Arts, Valparaiso University, USA) 2. Toward a Theology of the Art Museum, Karla Cavarra Britton (Yale School of Architecture, USA) 3. Native Americans on the National Mall: The Architecture of the Museum of the American Indian, Smithsonian Institution, Gretchen Buggeln (Duesenberg Chair in Christianity and the Arts, Valparaiso University, USA), with Douglas Cardinal (Architect, National Museum of the American Indian, USA) and Tim Johnson (National Museum of American History, USA) Part Two: Objects, Museums, Religions 4. The Museumification of Religion: Human Evolution and the Display of Ritual, S. Brent Plate (Visiting Associate Professor of Religious Studies, Hamilton College, USA) 5. Altar as Museum, Museum as Altar: Ethnography, Devotion, and Display, Mary Nooter Roberts (UCLA, USA) 6. Religious History Objects in Museums, Lauren F. Turek (Trinity University in San Antonio, USA) 7. Archaeological Displays: Ancient Objects, Current Beliefs, Chiara Zuanni (University of Manchester, UK) 8. Museums, Religious Objects, and the Flourishing Realm of the Supernatural in Modern Asia, Denis Byrne (Western Sydney University, Australia) Part Three: Responses to Objects, Museums, & Religion 9. Devotional Baggage, Steph Berns (University of Lancaster, UK) 10. Transactional and Experiential Responses to Religious Objects, Graham Howes (Emeritus Fellow of Trinity Hall, Cambridge and a Trustee of the Art and Christianity Enquiry) 11. Museums and the Repatriation of Objects, 1945-2015, Mark O'Neill (Director of Policy, Research and Development at Glasgow Life, UK) 12. The Case for the News Media's Critical Engagement with Museum Religious Exhibits, Menachem Wecker (Art Critic, Chicago, USA) Part Four: Museum Collecting and Research 13. Museum Collection and the History of Interpretation, David Morgan (Professor of Religious Studies, Duke University, USA) 14. Community-led Museums Exploring Religious Life in Canada: Abbotsford's Sikh Heritage Museum and Mennonite Heritage Museum, Matthew Francis (Executive Director, Chilliwack Museum and Archives, Canada) 15. Religious Objects and Conservation: The Changing Impact of Religious Objects on Conservators, Samantha Hamilton (Object Conservator at Museum Victoria; University of Melbourne, Australia) 16. Collecting and Research in the Museum of the History of Religion, Ekaterina Teryukova (Deputy Director for Research Affairs,Museum of the History of Religion, St Petersburg, Russia) 17. Studying, Teaching and Exhibiting Religion: The Marburg Museum of Religions - (Religionskundliche Sammlung), Konstanze Runge (Lecturer in Religious Studies, University of Marburg, Germany) Part Five: Museum Interpretation of Religion and Religious Objects 18. Radical Hospitality: Approaching Religious Understanding in Museums, Amanda Millay Hughes (Duke University Chapel, USA) 19. Islam and Museums: Learning and Outreach, John Reeve (Lecturer in the Department of Art, Design and Museology, UCL, UK) 20. Museums and Religion: Uneasy Companions, Tom Freudenheim ((Smithsonian Institute, USA) 21. Conversing with the Past: First-Person Religion Programming at Colonial Williamsburg, Gretchen Buggeln (Duesenberg Chair in Christianity and the Arts, Valparaiso University, USA) 22. Religion in Museums for Families with Children, Christian Carron (The Children's Museum of Indianapolis, USA), Susan Foutz (The Children's Museum of Indianapolis, USA), and Melissa Pederson (The Children's Museum of Indianapolis, USA) 23. Bringing the Sacred into Art Museums, Gary Vikan (The Walters Art Museum, USA) Part Six: Presenting Religion in a Variety of Museums 24. Rich and Varied: Religion in Museums, Crispin Paine (Honorary Lecturer at the Institute of Archaeology, UCL, UK) 25. The Museum of Biblical Art: a Worthwhile Experiment, Ena Giurescu Heller (Director of Rollins College Cornell Fine Arts Museum, USA) 26. Missionary Museums, Christopher Wingfield (Senior Curator, Archaeology, Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Cambridge University, UK) 27. Religion at Glencairn Museum: Past, Present, and Future, Ed Gyllenhaal (Curator, Glencairn Museum of Religion, Philadelphia, USA) Afterword: Looking to the Future of Religion in Museums, Gretchen Buggeln, Crispin Paine, and S. Brent Plate Index
Recenzii
This is a timely and accessible text that will be of great use to a range of scholars, teachers, students, and practitioners . Such a text could well spur further studies in non-Western displays and thus encourage a broadening of the discourse on religion in a way that is desperately needed.
Readers will enjoy the freedom of discussion that is created via the combination of both academic and professional voices . Each individual chapter works as a stand-alone piece, yet there are clear through-lines present in the work as a whole ... This text is also valuable for teaching academics that will find the individual chapters useful for a variety of courses, particularly religious studies, museum studies, and art history. Religion in Museums is a successful volume in that it provides a comprehensive, complex, and exuberant discussion of the numerous forms through which museums and religion come together.
This project engages the fascinating--and culturally important--conjunction of the subjects of museums and religion. The book has the potential to address and shape the future of this interdisciplinary discourse through an intriguing conjunction of cultural, scholarly, and curatorial perspectives.
This is an exciting and comprehensive study on how museums represent religion and the future prospects.
Readers will enjoy the freedom of discussion that is created via the combination of both academic and professional voices . Each individual chapter works as a stand-alone piece, yet there are clear through-lines present in the work as a whole ... This text is also valuable for teaching academics that will find the individual chapters useful for a variety of courses, particularly religious studies, museum studies, and art history. Religion in Museums is a successful volume in that it provides a comprehensive, complex, and exuberant discussion of the numerous forms through which museums and religion come together.
This project engages the fascinating--and culturally important--conjunction of the subjects of museums and religion. The book has the potential to address and shape the future of this interdisciplinary discourse through an intriguing conjunction of cultural, scholarly, and curatorial perspectives.
This is an exciting and comprehensive study on how museums represent religion and the future prospects.