ABSTRACT

Museum Objects, Health and Healing provides an innovative and interdisciplinary study of the relationship between objects, health and healing. Shedding light on the primacy of the human need for relationships with objects, the book explores what kind of implications these relationships might have on the exhibition experience.

Merging museum and object studies, as well as psychotherapy and the psychology of well-being, the authors present a new theory entitled Psychotherapeutic Object Dynamics, which provides a cross- disciplinary study of the relationship between objects, health and well-being. Drawing on primary research in museums, psychotherapeutic settings and professional practice throughout the US, Canada, Bosnia-Herzegovina and the UK, the book provides an overview of the theory’s origins, the breadth of its practical applications on a global level, and a framework for further understanding the potency of objects in exhibitions and daily life.

Museum Objects, Health and Healing will be essential reading for academics, researchers and postgraduate students interested in museum studies, material culture, mental health, psychotherapy, art therapies and anthropology. It should also be valuable reading for a wide range of practitioners, including curators, exhibition designers, psychologists, and psychotherapists.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

part Section I|1 pages

Our primal dialogue with objects

part Section II|1 pages

The theory of psychotherapeutic object dynamics

chapter 4|18 pages

Creation of the theory

part Section III|1 pages

Therapeutic object practices in clinical and educational settings

chapter 6|13 pages

The wilderness within

chapter 7|13 pages

Creativity and the true teacher

part Section IV|1 pages

Health and healing in the museum setting

part Section V|1 pages

Implications for museums