Ramper, dédoubler : collecte coloniale et affect = Crawling doubles : colonial collecting and affect / sous la direction de Mathieu K. Abonnenc, Lotte Arndt, Catalina Lozano ; avec les contributions de Julien Bondaz [et al].
Material type: TextLanguage: French, English Publication details: Paris : B42, 2016. Description: 325 p. : illus. (some col.) ; 22 cmISBN: 9782917855683Other title: Crawling doubles : colonial collecting and affectSubject(s): Collectors and collecting -- Colonies | Ethnological museums and collections | Material culture -- ColoniesLOC classification: AM231 | .R36 2016Summary: "Collecting objects was a frequent practice among European colonial states in their occupied territories. From the second half of the nineteenth century, colonial powers encouraged their citizens in the colonies to collect objects that would enrich the ethnographical collections of the mother country and document the material culture of societies that--under the influence of colonialization--were undergoing rapid change. The objects collected ended up in countless European museums or in the hands of private collectors. Their presence in these collections raises epistemological, museographical and ethical questions in need of urgent consideration."--Page 4 of cover.Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | Jameel Library | AM231 .R36 2016 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 5121 |
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AM151 .E94 1991 Exhibiting cultures : |b the poetics and politics of museum display / | AM151 .M34 2002 The manual of museum exhibitions / | AM151 .M34 2014 Manual of museum exhibitions / | AM231 .R36 2016 Ramper, dédoubler : | AZ101 .F6813 2010 The archaeology of knowledge and the discourse on language / | B40 .M84 2012 مفردات الفلسفة الأوربية : الفلسفة السياسية / | B51 .V6313 2014 Dictionary of untranslatables : |
Originates in a series of panel discussions held within the frame of the 8th Berlin biennial for contemporary art in 2014.
Includes bibliographical references.
"Collecting objects was a frequent practice among European colonial states in their occupied territories. From the second half of the nineteenth century, colonial powers encouraged their citizens in the colonies to collect objects that would enrich the ethnographical collections of the mother country and document the material culture of societies that--under the influence of colonialization--were undergoing rapid change. The objects collected ended up in countless European museums or in the hands of private collectors. Their presence in these collections raises epistemological, museographical and ethical questions in need of urgent consideration."--Page 4 of cover.
French and English.
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