
Translating Museums
A Counterhistory of South Asian Museology
Shaila Bhatti(Author)
Left Coast Press Inc
1st Edition
Published on 15. June 2012
Book
Hardback
301 pages
978-1-61132-144-9 (ISBN)
Description
Shaila Bhatti's immersive study of the Lahore Museum in Pakistan is one of the first books to offer an in-depth historical and ethnographic analysis of a South Asian museum. Bhatti thus presents an alternative example of visitor experience and museum practice to that of the West, which has been the dominant museological model to date. This examination of the Lahore Museum's objects, staff, and visitors (past and present) provides an informative case study that reveals local perceptions and uses of museums in non-Western societies to be fraught with social, political, and cultural implications and appropriations. Through Lahore, Bhatti examines the history of exchange between Britian and South Asia and advances our current understanding of what constitutes postcolonial museum interpretation and its public.
Reviews / Votes
"The author conducts an ethnographic study of a famous and one of the oldest museums in Lahore, Pakistan and presents a discourse on comparative museology beyond the institutional norms of dominant euro-centricism. This is an important undertaking, as research and theories associated with the museums in Southeast Asia have long suffered from rather unsubstantiated claims associated with pursuit of euro-centric ideologies... The author makes a sincere effort to unveil the complexities associated with postcolonial museologies and her well-researched initiative will provoke further deliberations in this field of inquiry."--Journal of Tourism and Cultural Change "Bhatti's study invites us to move away from old models of investigating colonial museums to view them instead as sites of contested discourse, where individual agency is very much at play all of the time. Moreover, the emphasis on reception, that is, on how the audience experiences the museum, is somewhat novel in the South Asian context. Lastly, Translating Museums reminds us that museums are not just visual, but they are visceral, demanding our participation in a multi-sensory capacity." -Frank J. Korom, Museum Anthropology "The most famous museum in South Asia is paradoxically one that relatively few South Asian specialists have visited: and not many of them visit because it is in Lahore, Pakistan, while the great majority of such academics work in India, Nepal, Bangladesh or Sri Lanka... The book will be of interest to all who work in museums. It presents the history of this particular museum, talks at some length about its valuable collections and its methods of administration, and also has a lot to say about the several publics it caters to nowadays."-Visual AnthropologyMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Walnut Creek
United States
Illustrations
Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Weight
589 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-61132-144-9 (9781611321449)
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Schweitzer Classification
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E-Book
06/2016
Routledge
€65.99
Available for download

E-Book
06/2016
Routledge
€65.99
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Book
06/2012
1st Edition
Left Coast Press Inc
€81.99
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Person
Shaila Bhatti is currently an Honorary Research Associate at the Department of Anthropology, University College London, where she also gained her PhD and held an ESRC Postdoctoral Fellowship. Over the last decade, she has conducted ethnographic research on museums in India and Pakistan with doctoral research focusing on the Lahore Museum in Pakistan. Her research and publications explore the history of museums in South Asia as well as their contemporary significance as moments of cultural and visual encounters for society in terms of collections, curatorial activities, exhibitionary practices and visitor interpretation. Her interests extend beyond museum anthropology to include the material and visual cultures of South Asia and local notions of cultural heritage, history and identity.
Content
Chapter 1: Museums in Translation; Chapter 2: Colonial Mementos to Postcolonial Imaginings; Chapter 3: Museum Archons 1; Chapter 4: Visiting the Museum; Chapter 5: Nokta Nazar 1 of the Lahore Museum's 'Audience'