ABSTRACT

The Contemporary Museum issues a challenge to those who view the museum as an artefact of history, constrained in its outlook as much by professional, institutional and disciplinary creed, as by the collections it accumulated in the distant past. Denying that the museum can locate its purpose in the pursuit of tradition or in idealistic speculation about the future, the book asserts that this can only be found through an ongoing and proactive negotiation with the present: the contemporary.

This volume is not concerned with any present, but with the peculiar circumstances of what it refers to as the ‘global contemporary’ – the sense of living in a globally connected world that is preoccupied with the contemporary. To situate the museum in this world of real and immediate need and action, beyond the reach of history, the book argues, is to empower it to challenge existing dogmas and inequalities and sweep aside old hierarchies. As a result, fundamental questions need to be asked about such things as the museum’s relationship to global time and space, to systems and technologies of knowing, to ‘the life well lived’, to the movement and rights of people, and to the psychology, permanence and organisation of culture.

Incorporating diverse viewpoints from around the world, The Contemporary Museum is a follow-up volume to Museum Revolutions and, as such, should be essential reading for students in the fields of museum and heritage studies, cultural studies, communication and media studies, art history and social policy. Academics and museum professionals will also find this book a source of inspiration.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

The museum in the global contemporary

part I|2 pages

A world of equals

chapter 1|24 pages

Modernisms

Curating art’s past in the global present

chapter 2|18 pages

Indigenisation

Reconceptualising museology

chapter 3|19 pages

Islam

Islamic art, the Islamic world – and museums

chapter 4|14 pages

Xenophobia

Museums, refugees and fear of the other

chapter 5|15 pages

Diplomacy

Museums and international exhibitions

part II|2 pages

Present pasts

chapter 6|23 pages

Transience

Curating ephemeral art

chapter 7|14 pages

Performances

Contemporary encounters in historic spaces

chapter 8|10 pages

Transhistoricism

Using the past to critique the present

chapter 9|15 pages

Pasts

Authoring national histories in the contemporary city

part III|2 pages

Who we are

chapter 10|16 pages

Disability

Museums and our understandings of difference

chapter 11|16 pages

Contact

Framing prostitution in a city museum

chapter 12|14 pages

Small Wins

Tactics for the contemporary museum

chapter 13|18 pages

Anxiety

Unease in the museum