ISSN:
0084-6570
Language:
English
Titel der Quelle:
Annual review of anthropology
Publ. der Quelle:
Palo Alto, Calif : Annual Reviews Inc
Angaben zur Quelle:
Vol. 46 (2017), p. 241-259
DDC:
590
Abstract:
Anthropology has always involved collections and collecting. Collections helped give rise to the discipline's formation and were integral to theoretical perspectives rooted in hierarchies of race and technology in the nineteenth century. With the disavowal of these perspectives, collecting, and its resulting collections, remained an ongoing but unacknowledged activity. The material (re)turn in the 1980s brought anthropology's material legacies under renewed scrutiny by repositioning objects as having histories and agency. Ethnographies of collecting have helped reveal the often obscured collaborations that were, and are, critical to anthropological knowledge. Collaborations with indigenous communities involving collections are helping to address the discipline's asymmetry by challenging anthropological categories and authority. In the process, experimental ethnographies through digital and nondigital means are demonstrating that collections are profoundly relational. This relational perspective is helping to chart new directions for work in museums and the wider discipline.
Note:
Copyright: © 2017
DOI:
10.1146/annurev-anthro-102313-030259
URL:
https://search.proquest.com/docview/1951552125
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