Livre - What's Missing?
069 EDE
Description
Livre
Staatliche Museen zu Berlin
Dietrich Reimer Verlag
Edenheiser Iris
Tietmeyer Elisabeth 1960 - ...
Boersma Susanne
Presentation materielle : 250 p.
Dimensions : 24 cm
This book takes a closer look into some of the lacunae in the work of museums of everyday culture: Which objects, narratives, methods and actors have been left out of museums’ perspectives on daily lives in European societies? Museum practitioners and researchers alike address current transformations in the collecting and exhibiting of everyday objects and vernacular art, while short object essays provide new perspectives on artefacts from the collection of the Museum Europäischer Kulturen – Staatliche Museen zu Berlin. This publication invites readers to critically interrogate the question of what’s missing in museum practices of collecting and presenting contemporary lifeworlds in Europe.
PROLOGUE: SETTING THE SCENE, p. 9 TIETMEYER Elisabeth, 20 Years of the MEK – Have We Reached Our Goals?, p. 10 EDENHEISER Iris, Introduction – Towards New Filters and Relations, p. 15 AKSOY Suay, What’s Missing? – Sticking to the Margins, p. 19 KASCHUBA Wolfgang, Between Cultural Heritage and Looted Art – European Museums in Turbulent Times, p. 23 FILLING THE GAPS AT THE MEK: 4 OBJECTS AND STORIES, p. 26 EDENHEISER Iris and GOUAFFO Albert, Kum’a Mbape and Ndumb’a Lobe on a Berlin Pictorial Broadsheet, p. 26 SADO Dachil, The Leggings, p. 28 GUL Fatma, Transnational Solidarity, p. 30 HOTOPP-RIECKE Mieste, The Fez, Emancipation, and Homelands, p. 32 PART I: GLOBAL EUROPE, p. 35 SCHÜHLE Judith, Global Europe – Of Objects, Objections and Objectifications, p. 36 MCMASTER Gerald, (Re)Presenting the European – The Virtual Platform for Indigenous Art, p. 38 TAFARI-AMA Imani M., Ontology of Objects – The Political Economy of Our Common Colonial Heritage, p. 47 MORI Akiko, Exhibiting Europe in an Ethno logical Museum in Japan – Redefining the Opposition Between Self and Other, p. 56 PARDUE Diana, Treasures from Home – European Identities in the Ellis Island Immigration Museum. A Photo Essay, p. 64 FILLING THE GAPS AT THE MEK: 4 OBJECTS AND STORIES, p. 72 GRUDA Hans-JOACHIM, #CollectingCorona, p. 72 CHEVALLIER-KAUSEL Eva, Yellow Vests, p. 74 SCHÜHLE Judith, Here to Stay or Here to Go?, p. 76 SIMON Hermann, Hanukkah Calendar, p. 78 PART II: TRANSFORMING COLLECTIONS, REIMAGINING EVERYDAY OBJECTS, p. 81 BUCHCZYK Magdalena, Pandora’s Box? Transforming Everyday Collections, p. 82 CHEVALLIER Denis, Collecting Contemporary Items to Study and Exhibit Social Issues – Experiences of the MuCEM, Marseilles, France, p. 84 OLESZKIEWICZ Małgorzata, Between Collecting “Traditional Folk Culture” and the Challenges of Contemporary Collection Policies – Current Dilemmas Facing Ethnographic Museums, p. 92 HARLIN Eeva-Kristiina, Ládjogahpir Rematriated – The Sámi Ontology of a Museum Object, p. 101 LEHRER Erica, From “Heritage Communities” to “Communities of Implication”, p. 113 FILLING THE GAPS AT THE MEK: 4 OBJECTS AND STORIES, p. 122 KÖBSELL Swantje, “There’s Never Anyone Like Me…”, p. 122 MALIK Saad, Queerness – Free Delivery to Your Home!, p. 124 NORTH Ace, Revoking the Future, p. 126 MOULIOU Marlen and AVRAMIDOU Sophia, The “Greek Crisis” and the Tale of an Unemployment Card, p. 128 PART III: MUSEUM METHODS AND STRUCTURES, p. 131 EDENHEISER Iris, Open the Gates – Museum Methods and Structures, p. 132 ATAMAN Ferda and KAMEL Susan, Our Heymat! Your Museum? – Towards a More Diverse Museum Culture, p. 134 BEITL Matthias, Collecting is Communicating, p. 139 Mahret Ifeoma KUPKA Contemporary Muslim Fashions – Racism and Diversity in European Museums, p. 147 SMITH Matt and SANDELL Richard, Bringing Queer Home, p. 154 MOULIOU Marlen, Absences and Silences in Greek Museums – Tracing the Gaps in Untold Stories, p. 165 FILLING THE GAPS AT THE MEK: 4 OBJECTS AND STORIES, p. 174 WILD Beate, The Most Fragile in Bubble Wrap, p. 174 REDLIN Jane, Cosplay, p. 176 TIETMEYER Elisabeth, What’s Missing?, p. 178 BUCHCZYK Magdalena, Horezu Bowl, p. 180 PART IV: EXHIBITING EUROPE?, p. 183 HECK Brigitte, Another Story to Tell? New Narrations for European Exhibitions, p. 184 SCHMID Anna, Europe as Blind Spot – Struggling for Connectivity, p. 186 BURNS Kieran, Mind the Gap(s)! – The Challenges of Delineating a Narrative at the House of European History, p. 196 KUTI Klára, Community of Remembrance Versus the Politics of Memory – The Example of a Hungarian Museum, p. 206 MOEHRING Markus, Cross-Border Exhibitions to Reflect Upon and Overcome National Imaginaries, p. 214 FILLING THE GAPS AT THE MEK: 4 OBJECTS AND STORIES, p. 224 PESCHEL Tina, What Am I Missing?, p. 224 WITTENZELLNER Jana, Whereof One Cannot Speak… Should Not Be Collected?, p. 226 RAHEMIPOUR Patricia, “It’s sad to watch Europe rot from the inside out”, p. 228 ZIEHE Irene, Portrait of Amare Romagnas in a POW Camp, p. 230 EPILOGUE: FROM MISSING TO FORGETTING, p. 233 MACDONALD Sharon, Seven Modes of Museum Forgetting, p. 234 BOERSMA Susanne, CHAHINE Anne, MUCHA Franziska and ZWART Inge, The Archive of Forgotten Memories – A Participatory Process of Reflection, p. 241 AUTHOR BIOGRAPHIES, p. 246 COLOPHON, p. 250