This article posits the value in considering the affective politics in the everyday space of the British Museum with a postcolonial lens. Based on research collaborations with artist Rosanna Raymond the article argues that the gallery space becomes a theatre of pain. The museum acts as a site of materializing the pain of epistemic violence, the rupture of genocide and the deadening of artefacts. The article examines the embodied experience of encountering these galleries and the effect of Tony Bennett’s claim (2006) that the art museum becomes a mausoleum for the European eye, but which petrifies living cultures. In particular the article considers the petrification as it operates along racial lines. The museum space from critical po...
Museums are the medium of our age. As such, the museum world cannot be isolated from political real...
Heritage and its economies are driven by affective politics and consolidated through emotions such a...
The Art of the Americas exhibition (March – July 2018) at the Max Chambers Library, University of Ce...
This article posits the value in considering the affective politics in the everyday space of the Bri...
This paper picks up from extensive literatures that have addressed the relationship of heritage to n...
The application of postmodern critical theory to the essentially modernist construct of the museum h...
Th e purpose of this article is to investigate the museum as a site of cultural powers and tradition...
Through aesthetics we can articulate affective politics and demonstrate new ways of ‘doing’ progress...
About the book: This fascinating text introduces readers to postcolonial theory using the context o...
There is much published research and strategic rhetoric on decolonising the discipline, the academy,...
This article proposes a method for analysing museums as sites of intimate and colonially-produced in...
Through aesthetics we can articulate affective politics and demonstrate new ways of ‘doing’ progress...
Engaging with archaeologists, as well as artists exploring the issue of 'race' representation, this ...
© 2020 SAGE Publications. In this article, we discuss a series of artistic interventions in a univer...
My paper is concerned with decolonising contemporary museological practice, specifically in relation...
Museums are the medium of our age. As such, the museum world cannot be isolated from political real...
Heritage and its economies are driven by affective politics and consolidated through emotions such a...
The Art of the Americas exhibition (March – July 2018) at the Max Chambers Library, University of Ce...
This article posits the value in considering the affective politics in the everyday space of the Bri...
This paper picks up from extensive literatures that have addressed the relationship of heritage to n...
The application of postmodern critical theory to the essentially modernist construct of the museum h...
Th e purpose of this article is to investigate the museum as a site of cultural powers and tradition...
Through aesthetics we can articulate affective politics and demonstrate new ways of ‘doing’ progress...
About the book: This fascinating text introduces readers to postcolonial theory using the context o...
There is much published research and strategic rhetoric on decolonising the discipline, the academy,...
This article proposes a method for analysing museums as sites of intimate and colonially-produced in...
Through aesthetics we can articulate affective politics and demonstrate new ways of ‘doing’ progress...
Engaging with archaeologists, as well as artists exploring the issue of 'race' representation, this ...
© 2020 SAGE Publications. In this article, we discuss a series of artistic interventions in a univer...
My paper is concerned with decolonising contemporary museological practice, specifically in relation...
Museums are the medium of our age. As such, the museum world cannot be isolated from political real...
Heritage and its economies are driven by affective politics and consolidated through emotions such a...
The Art of the Americas exhibition (March – July 2018) at the Max Chambers Library, University of Ce...