ABSTRACT

Museums, Art and Inclusion in a Climate Emergency considers the impact of the Anthropocene on history and memory, approaches to objects and agency and the incommensurability of western and Indigenous ontologies.

Drawing on Indigenous knowledge, humanities and museological literature, continental philosophy, contemporary art and popular culture, Baker acknowledges the autonomous agency of geological forms, including soils, minerals and fossil fuels. Demonstrating that this has implications for an expanded idea of an ‘inclusive’ museum and its relationship to entities beyond ‘life’ and living species, the book argues that the ‘inclusion’ paradigm needs to include nonlife actors. Gesturing to a geontological ‘turn’ through developing notions of geo-inclusion, the mineralhuman and approaches to object agency that connect with Aboriginal ‘heritage’, Baker exposes the ongoing destruction of Country by mining interests in Western Australia and elsewhere. By addressing the need for urgent change through the artifice of the museum, the book identifies an expanded approach to inclusion beyond the limits imposed by the politics of identity.

Museums, Art and Inclusion in a Climate Emergency theorises the potential of an expanded idea of the museum and will be of interest to scholars and students engaged in the study of museums and heritage, environmental humanities and geo-humanities, ecological art history and contemporary art.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

Museums and transformation

chapter 1|15 pages

Disappearing soils

Toward a pithier pedagogy

chapter 2|16 pages

Sinking and melting

Glossing the climate problem

chapter 3|13 pages

Repurposing the inclusive museum

chapter 6|12 pages

Coal and fossil capital

chapter 7|12 pages

Oil utopias and petro-invisibility

chapter 8|12 pages

Museums inside the earth

chapter 9|9 pages

Gold on show

The toxic glamour of the yellow rock

chapter |10 pages

After neutrality

The relevant museum