In late June 2019, Tristram Hunt wrote a piece for The Guardian: ‘Should museums return their colonial artefacts?’
Here I want to focus specifically on museum documentation, viewed through the lens of what is perhaps Hunt’s most problematic statement: “For a museum like the V&A, to decolonise is to decontextualise.” Any examination of museum artefacts online quickly reveals that, when it comes to metadata, missing context is a significant issue, and the concept of decolonisation a valuable part of the solution.
This paper was presented on my behalf by Tom Norcliffe on 27 September 2017, at the Australian Society of Archivists’ conference ‘Diverse Worlds,’ 25-28 September, Melbourne, Australia.
The origins of this paper can be traced back to September 2016, with the release of a draft document by the International Council on Archive’s Expert Group on Archival Description (or EGAD) titled ‘Records in Contexts – A Conceptual Model for Archival Description’ – RiC for short. My purpose is not so much to critique or challenge that document, as to use it as the starting point for a broader discussion.
In the middle of the year I presented two conference papers: – ‘What we talk about when we talk about things’ at Digital Humanities Australasia in Hobart, Australia (20-23 June 2016) – ‘Mind the gaps: missing connections in museum documentation’… Continue Reading →
I have been aware of Mitchell Whitelaw’s great work on generous interfaces for a while now, so was interested when a colleague recently sent through a link to Mitchell’s 2011 National Digital Forum presentation Generous Interfaces. The particular example my… Continue Reading →
© 2024 Context Junky — Powered by WordPress
Theme by Anders Noren — Up ↑