Contesting Knowledge: Museums and Indigenous Perspectives by Susan Sleeper-Smith


Contesting Knowledge: Museums and Indigenous Perspectives
Title : Contesting Knowledge: Museums and Indigenous Perspectives
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0803219482
ISBN-10 : 9780803219489
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 374
Publication : First published July 1, 2009

This interdisciplinary and international collection of essays illuminates the importance and effects of Indigenous perspectives for museums. The contributors challenge and complicate the traditionally close colonialist connections between museums and nation-states and urge more activist and energized roles for museums in the decades ahead. The essays in section 1 consider ethnography’s influence on how Europeans represent colonized peoples. Section 2 essays analyze curatorial practices, emphasizing how exhibitions must serve diverse masters rather than solely the curator’s own creativity and judgment, a dramatic departure from past museum culture and practice. Section 3 essays consider tribal museums that focus on contesting and critiquing colonial views of American and Canadian history while serving the varied needs of the indigenous communities. The institutions examined in these pages range broadly from the National Museum of the American Indian in Washington DC; the Oneida Nation Museum in Oneida, Wisconsin; tribal museums in the Klamath River region in California; the tribal museum in Zuni, New Mexico; the Museum of the American Indian in New York City; and the District Six Museum in Cape Town, South Africa.


Contesting Knowledge: Museums and Indigenous Perspectives Reviews


  • Traci

    An important and long overdue compilation of authors, many of them with tribal affiliations, exploring the massive paradigm shift that has occurred in the curation of Native American (and to a lesser degree indigenous) cultural materials. There are at least 3 chapters about the NMAI, including some biting critiques as well as praise, but the part I found most fascinating was the final section on tribal museums. Most of the authors seem to agree that this is the most exciting arena, and the space most free from nation-building entanglements of the past. I wish there had been a synthesis, if one could be written, of principles for sensitive curation of Native American materials--this kind of information needs to be more widely available.