ABSTRACT

Narrating Objects, Collecting Stories is a wide-ranging collection of essays exploring the stories that can be told about objects and those who choose to collect them. Examining objects and collecting in different historical, social and institutional contexts, an international, interdisciplinary group of authors consider the meanings and values with which objects are imputed and the processes and implications of collecting. This includes considering the entanglement of objects and collectors alike in webs of social relations, the creation of value and social change; object biographies and the stories – often conflicting – that objects come to represent; and the strategies used to reconstruct and retell the narratives of objects. The book includes considerations of individual objects and groups of objects, such as domestic interiors, Chinese Buddhist artefacts, novelty tea-pots, Scottish stone monuments, African ironworking, a postcolonial painting and memorials to those killed on the roads in Australia. It also contains chapters dealing with particular collectors – including Charles Bell and Beatrix Potter – and representational techniques.

chapter 1|9 pages

Introduction

Objects, collectors and representations

part I|40 pages

The mutuality between objects and persons

chapter 1|4 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|8 pages

String-figure making

Processes of objectification and embodiment

chapter 3|11 pages

The material culture of conflict

Artefacts in the Museum of Free Derry, Northern Ireland

part II|68 pages

Object meanings in context

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

chapter 5|14 pages

What the Water Has Given Me

Frida Kahlo's postcolonial map of Mexico

chapter 7|18 pages

Three stones, one landscape, many stories

Cultural biography and the early medieval sculptures of Inchyra and St Madoes, Carse of Gowrie, Perthshire, Scotland

chapter 8|16 pages

Becoming ancient ruins

Monastic remains as ‘facts on the ground'

part III|77 pages

Collectors and collecting in focus

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

chapter 11|14 pages

Designing a political space

chapter 12|17 pages

Charles Bell's collection of ‘curios'

Acquisitions and encounters during a Himalayan journey

chapter 13|12 pages

‘He knows me … but not at the museum'

Women, natural history collecting and museums, 1880–1914

part IV|74 pages

Representational and narrative strategies

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

chapter 14|18 pages

Errors in translation

The uses of reconstructions in ethnographic fieldwork

chapter 15|16 pages

Objects of subversion

Contested spaces, competing stories and the material culture of motoring

chapter 16|18 pages

Public displays of private collections

Presenting the collection of Eleni Stathatos to the museum visitor

chapter 17|16 pages

People and their things

Integrating archaeological theory into prehistoric Aegean museum displays

chapter |12 pages

Epilogue

The recognition of Aboriginal art and the building of collections