Livre - Beyond modernity
069 FER
Description
Livre
Espera
Ferracuti Sandra 2012 - ...
Frasca Elisabetta
Lattanzi Vito 1957 - ...
Museo nazionale preistorico etnografico Luigi Pigorini
Presentation materielle : 1 vol. (XXIII-343 p.)
Dimensions : 24 cm
LA ROCCA Luigi, Foreword, XI FERRACUTI Sandra, FRASCA Elisabetta, LATTANZI Vito, Editor’s Introduction, XIII FRASCA Elisabetta, The Legacy of Ivan Karp, XXI PART 1 MUSEUMS FACING CONTEMPORARY CHALLENGES LATTANZI Vito, Towards a Museum of Possible Worlds, p. 3 JALLA Daniele, Museums Beyond the Crisis. Horizon 2025, p. 21 BOUTTIAUX Anne-Marie, Still Tangled in Contradiction After All These Years. “Ethnography Museums and World Cultures” European Project, p. 37 PART 2 BETWEEN PAST AND PRESENT: MUSEUMS, COLLECTIONS, REPRESENTATIONS KRATZ Corinne A., The “Ethnographic” in the Museum: Knowledge Production, Fragments, and Relationships, p. 61 DELGADO Elena, Museums as Sites for Reflection, p. 79 VAN BROEKHOVEN Laura, Ethnographic Heterotopia, p. 91 KASARHÉROU Emmanuel, The Inventory of Kanak Collections in Europe: Stolen Heritage or Common Heritage to Revive? , p. 99 GRYSEELS Guido, The Renovation of the Royal Museum for Central Africa, p. 107 JIROUŠKOVÁ Jana, The Images of Foreign Cultures in the Era of Globalisation, or Safe Exoticism for Everyone, p. 121 NOBILI Carlo, What Kind of Ethnography at the “Pigorini” Museum? I Have a Dream!, p. 131 HARRIS Clare, Digital Dilemmas: The Ethnographic Museum as Distributive Institution, p. 139 PLANKENSTEINER Barbara, Objects or People? Discrepancies of Focus in the History of the Ethnography Museum, p. 151 HORSE Joe D., By The People, For The People: The Presentation of Native American Art and Culture, p. 163 PHILLIPS Ruth B., Capture The Politics of Reconnection: Museum Collections as Sites of Indigenous (and Non-Indigenous) Cultural Recovery, p. 171 PART 3 DO ETHNOGRAPHY MUSEUMS NEED ETHNOGRAPHY? FEEST Christian, Which Ethnography Do Ethnographic Museums Need? , p. 185 PRICE Sally, Art, Anthropology, and Museums in the United States: Ups and Downs of the Past Half-Century, p. 197 TURCI Mario, What Happens to Ethnography in the Museum’s Embrace? The Expo-graphic Nature of Ethnographic Writing, p. 209 MUTEBA LUNTUMBUE Toma, Building New Politics of Alterity: the Story of a Protest Exhibition, p. 219 REINIUS Lotten Gustafsson, GRINELL Klas, The King is Dead. Long Live the King: Un-inheriting Modern Ethnography while Inheriting Objects of Ethnography, p. 229 HEERMANN Ingrid, Contemporary Art and Ethnographic Museums. A Problem Field for Ethnographic Analysis, p. 241 GONSETH Marc-Olivier, Ethnographic Data and Expographic Process: a Need for Interpretive Theories, (Micro-) Fieldworks, Transverse Analyses and Poetic Irony, p. 249 ROWLANDS Michael, WERE Graeme, Digital Heritage Technologies and Issues of Community Engagement and Cultural Restitution in “New Style” Ethnographic Museums, p. 259 PADIGLIONE Vincenzo, Drifting Ethnographic Installations: How to Recognize Them, How to Disseminate Them, p. 279 CLEMENTE Pietro, MARCUS George and FERRACUTI Sandra, Of Foxes and Ants. A Public Dialogue, p. 291 AT THE COLLOQUIUM Program, p. 316 Abstracts, p. 320 Biographies of Participants, p. 332 Colloquium Credits, p. 342
Résumés en anglais en fin d'ouvrage. Bibliogr. en fin de contributions