ABSTRACT

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.

chapter Chapter 1|49 pages

Museums in Translation

The Birth of the Museum in Colonial India

chapter Chapter 2|33 pages

Colonial Mementos to Postcolonial Imaginings

The Transformation of the Lahore Museum

chapter Chapter 3|27 pages

Museum Archons 1

The Habitual Discourse of the Lahore Museum

chapter Chapter 4|43 pages

Visiting the Museum

Curiosity about the Ajaib Ghar

chapter Chapter 5|38 pages

Nokta Nazar 1 of the Lahore Museum's ‘Audience'