Description
"The Museum of Babel: Meditations on the Metahistorical Turn in Museography is an enlightening, transatlantic reading of contemporary exhibits of the museum's own past. Thurner argues that the ghosts of the museum's past evoked in these exhibits maps museography's future. Museums everywhere now exhibit 'evocations' of their own pasts, often in the form of refashioned, ancestral cabinets of curiosities. Thurner calls this the metahistorical turn in museography. Providing engaging and lively meditations on exhibits of the museal past in art, natural history, archaeology, and anthropology museums, including the Prado, the Royal Cabinet of Natural History, the British Museum, the Louvre, Coimbra's Science Museum, Brazil's torched Museu Nacional, Mexico's Museum of Anthropology, Argentina's Museo de la Plata, and the Venice Art Biennale, among others, Thurner argues that the metahistorical turn in museography is exposing the museum's true vocation, which is to be a museum of itself, or metamuseum. In a word, The Museum of Babel is a meditation on the museum's true vocation. As such, it will be required reading for museologists, museum professionals, historians of art and science, anthropologists, and students in an array of fields, including museum studies, cultural studies, global studies, history, archaeology, anthropology and art history"--
ISBN 9781032911533