Journal articles on the topic 'Relational museology'

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1

Kobielska, Maria. "INVENTING A RELATIONAL MUSEUM." Muzealnictwo 63 (September 7, 2022): 128–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0015.9810.

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The paper is a review of the book by Janusz Byszewski and Beata Nessel-Łukasik Muzeum relacyjne. Przed progiem / za progiem [Relational Museum. Before the Threshold / Beyond the Threshold] inaugurating the ‘Museology: New Places’ series. It discusses in more detail the title project and the assumed relational museum which in its authors’ understanding is characterized by the focus on the relations of a museum as an institution with the local community, based on a rich social programme, co-created with museum’s external actors on an equal-footing basis. Both the volume’s content and its experimental stylistic, with a special focus on its graphic layout are discussed.
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Hall, Gwendolyn Midlo. "Africa and Africans in the African Diaspora: The Uses of Relational Databases." American Historical Review 115, no. 1 (February 2010): 136–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/ahr.115.1.136.

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Herle, Anita. "Relational Objects: Connecting People and Things Through Pasifika Styles." International Journal of Cultural Property 15, no. 2 (May 2008): 159–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0940739108080090.

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Debates around cultural properties tend to focus on law and ethics, on appropriation and ownership, with media representations often producing stereotypes that reinforce and polarize the terms of the debate. The common, typically polemical, notion is that rapacious museums are merely a final resting point for captive static objects, with repatriation viewed as simply restorative compensation. A robust challenge to this view was developed in the Declaration on the Importance and Value of Universal Museums signed in 2002 by the directors of 19 leading museums in Europe and North America. The concept of the universal museum asserts that objects are cared for and held in trust for the world, overriding shifting political and ethnic boundaries and enabling the visitor to see “different parts of the world as indissolubly linked.” Although many would be in sympathy with the rhetorical position asserted, critics have argued that the declaration is a thinly veiled attempt to bolster immunity to repatriation claims. On both sides of the debate, the hegemonic position of many museums remains unsettling.
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Betts, Matthew w., Mari Hardenberg, and Ian Stirling. "How Animals Create Human History: Relational Ecology and the Dorset–Polar Bear Connection." American Antiquity 80, no. 1 (January 2015): 89–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.7183/0002-7316.79.4.89.

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AbstractCarvings that represent polar bears (Ursus maritimus) are commonly found in Dorset Paleo-Eskimo archaeological sites across the eastern Arctic. Relational ecology, combined with Amerindian perspectivism, provides an integrated framework within which to comprehensively assess the connections between Dorset and polar bears. By considering the representational aspects of the objects, we reveal an ethology of polar bears encoded within the carvings’ various forms. Reconstructing the experiences and perceptions of Dorset as they routinely interacted with these creatures, and placing these interactions in socioeconomic, environmental, and historical context, permits us to decode a symbolic ecology inherent in the effigies. To the Dorset, these carvings were simultaneously tools and mnemonics (symbols). As tools, they were used to directly access the predatory and spiritual abilities of bears or, more prosaically, to teach and remind of the variety of proper hunting techniques available for capturing seals. As symbols, however, they were far more powerful, signaling how Dorset people conceptualized themselves and their place in the universe. Symbolic of an ice-edge way of life, the effigies expose the role that this special relationship with polar bears played in the creation of Dorset histories and identities.
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Decker, Corrie. "A Feminist Methodology of Age-Grading and History in Africa." American Historical Review 125, no. 2 (April 1, 2020): 418–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ahr/rhaa170.

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Abstract Age is an essential category of analysis for African history. For over a century, social scientists have emphasized the central role of age-grading in African cultures. Whereas most people in precolonial African societies assessed age in relative terms (juniors vs. seniors), European colonialism expanded the legal importance of chronological age. Gender mattered to both definitions of age. Faced with two incommensurable systems for understanding life stages—one based on relational (male) seniority and the other on chronological age—African women growing up during the colonial period found new ways to assert a sense of belonging among generations of women. I argue in favor of a feminist methodology that recognizes the broader trend among a generation of young women in Africa who employed conflicts over age to assert their maturity, and in doing so located themselves in their own histories. Identifying female age sets and generations thus offers new perspectives on how African girls and women make and remake history.
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Baker, Jade Tangiāhua. "Te Pahitauā: Border Negotiators." International Journal of Cultural Property 15, no. 2 (May 2008): 141–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0940739108080120.

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Objects were and still are pivotal in configuring intertribal relationships; and equally, they played a crucial role in negotiating the borders between early colonial situations and Māori, the indigenous people of Aotearoa New Zealand. This article explores the notion of object efficacy through discussing further relational values such as place, oral and written histories, visionary leadership, and political and culturally defined imperatives, particularly as they contribute to reviving an object's embedded knowledge, in this case the entangled agencies of taonga.
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Lemay-Perreault, Rébéca. "L’Educational Turn. L’éducation comme média artistique: À la recherche d’une interactivité nouvelle." Canadian Review of Art Education: Research and Issues / Revue canadienne de recherches et enjeux en éducation artistique 43, no. 1 (October 17, 2016): 40. http://dx.doi.org/10.26443/crae.v43i1.16.

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Abstract: “Educational Turn”, an expression used for a decade by museology and various contemporary art environments, by artists as well as curators (Rogoff, 2008; O’Neill & Wilson (Eds.), 2010; Wilson & O’Neill, 2010; Wesseling (Ed.), 2011). Derived from artistic avant-garde tendencies of the second half of the 20th Century, including institutional critique and relational aesthetics, it immediately brings forward the issues of interactive modalities of the exhibited artwork, public participation, and knowledge dissemination. But this expression actually goes further since the concept of “educational turn” is not only rooted in the artwork as a mediation tool, but to cite Podesva (2007), in education as an artistic medium, fudging the disciplinary limits of art, museology, and museum education. What is new about this turn and how does it transform museum practices? This essay aims to define a new interaction mode embodied by these productions by analyzing the historiographical corpus theorizing the movement. KEYWORDS: Educational Turn; contemporary art; interactivity; museum; postmodernismRésumé: « Educational turn », un terme qui, depuis dix ans, a su se faire connaître dans différents milieux de l’art contemporain et de la muséologie, tant chez les artistes que chez les conservateurs (Rogoff, 2008; O’Neill & Wilson (Eds.), 2010; Wilson & O’Neill, 2010; Wesseling (Ed.), 2011). Issu des avant-gardes artistiques de la deuxième moitié du 20e siècle, notamment de la critique institutionnelle et de l’esthétique relationnelle, il pose d’emblée la question des modalités d’interactivité de l’objet d’exposition, de la participation des publics et de la transmission des savoirs. Mais l’expression va plus loin puisque l’idée d’un « educational turn » prend non seulement ancrage dans une conception de l’œuvre d’art comme dispositif de médiation, mais aussi, pour reprendre l’expression de Podesva (2007), de l’éducation comme un médium artistique, brouillant les frontières disciplinaires de l’art, de la muséologie et de l’éducation muséale. En quoi ce tournant est-il nouveau et quelles transformations apporte-il à la pratique muséale ? À travers une analyse du corpus historiographique théorisant le mouvement, cet essai vise définir un nouveau mode d’interactivité incarné dans ces productions.MOTS CLES: Eductional Turn; art contemporain; interactivité; musée; postmodernité
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Morphy, Howard, Jason M. Gibson, and Alison K. Brown. "Special Section." Museum Worlds 10, no. 1 (July 1, 2022): 218–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/armw.2022.100119.

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Anthropology, Art, and Ethnographic Collections: A Conversation with Howard MorphyJason M. Gibson (JG): In your book Museums, Infinity and the Culture of Protocols: Ethnographic Collections and Source Communities (Morphy 2020), you begin with an anecdote of visiting the Pitt Rivers Museum as a young child. Did museums play a part in sparking an interest in humanity, and its diversity, or were you fascinated by the Other?Book Review: Museums, Societies and the Creation of Value, Howard Morphy and Robyn McKenzie, eds. (London: Routledge, 2022)What does value mean within and beyond museum contexts? What are the processes through which value is manifested? How might a deeper understanding of these processes contribute to the practice of museum anthropology? These questions are explored in Museums, Societies and the Creation of Value, which looks at collaborative work in museums using ethnographic collections as a focus. Most of the chapters involve collections from Australia and the Pacific—reflecting the origins of many of them in two conferences associated with the project “The Relational Museum and Its Objects,” funded by the Australian Research Council and the Australian National University and led by Howard Morphy. Bringing together early career researchers, as well as museum-based scholars who have many years of thinking through and learning with community-based research partners, makes evident how the processual shifts in museum anthropology toward a more collaboratively grounded practice have become normalized, but crucially also highlights the value of “slow museology,” as the editors note in their introduction (3), acknowledging Raymond Silverman’s (2015) term. While the editors caution that the core values of ethnographic collections and museums are not universal, the inclusion of chapters from beyond the Australia/Pacific region highlights that the foundational underpinning values and aspirations for cross-cultural work—“the desire for understanding” and “the desire to be understood” (22) are shaping much of the innovative museum-based work currently being carried out worldwide. Examples include Gwyneira Isaac’s chapter on 3D technologies of reproduction and their value for Tlingit of Alaska, and Henrietta Lidchi and Nicole Hartwell’s examination of how materiality and memory intersect in collections associated with nineteenth-century British military campaigns.
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Perczel, Júlia. "Is Structure Context or Content? A Data-Driven Method of Comparing Museum Collections." Život umjetnosti, no. 105 (December 31, 2019): 76–109. http://dx.doi.org/10.31664/zu.2019.105.04.

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This paper presents a method which depicts a museum collection as a relational venue structure. This venue structure is constructed from the exhibition history of the artists acquired by the museum, in such a way that it uniquely characterizes the collection. Such a structure can be conceived as a historical fingerprint of a collection. The paper compares such derived historical fingerprints of three canonical museum collections: that of the Tate Collection in the UK, the Centre Pompidou in Paris and the Museum of Modern Art in New York. The goal is to develop the understanding of the way they represent the art of the Central-East European region. The research shows that the representation formed by the three museums on the region relies on specific venues and connections among them. Furthermore, the analysis has identified patterns within these structures that contribute to the formation of the representations in typical ways. As a result, the agency of museums is tackled from a data-driven perspective highlighting the social embeddedness of representations, and a method is introduced that enables comparison of collections built through distinctive acquisition histories.
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Sexton, Anna, and Dolly Sen. "More voice, less ventriloquism– exploring the relational dynamics in a participatory archive of mental health recovery." International Journal of Heritage Studies 24, no. 8 (June 16, 2017): 874–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13527258.2017.1339109.

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Birch, Jennifer, Sturt W. Manning, Samantha Sanft, and Megan Anne Conger. "Refined Radiocarbon Chronologies for Northern Iroquoian Site Sequences: Implications for Coalescence, Conflict, and the Reception of European Goods." American Antiquity 86, no. 1 (September 22, 2020): 61–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2020.73.

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This article presents results to date of the Dating Iroquoia project. Our objective is to develop high-precision radiocarbon chronologies for northeastern North American archaeology. Here, we employ Bayesian chronological modeling of 184 AMS radiocarbon dates derived from 42 Northern Iroquoian village sites in five regional sequences in order to construct new date estimates. The resulting revised chronology demands a rethinking of key assumptions about cultural process in the region regarding the directionality and timing of processes of coalescence and conflict and the introduction of European trade goods. The results suggest that internal conflict may have preceded confederacy formation among the Haudenosaunee but not the Wendat, as has been previously assumed. External conflict, previously thought to have begun in the early seventeenth century, began more than a century earlier. New data also indicate that the timing and distribution of European materials were more variable between communities than acknowledged by the logic underlying traditional trade-good chronologies. This enhanced chronological resolution permits the development and application of archaeological theories that center the lived experiences and relational histories of Iroquoian communities, as opposed to the generalized thinking that has dominated past explanatory frameworks.
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Howey, Meghan C. L. "Other-Than-Human Persons, Mishipishu, and Danger in the Late Woodland Inland Waterway Landscape of Northern Michigan." American Antiquity 85, no. 2 (February 7, 2020): 347–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2019.102.

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Other-than-human persons and the role they play in transforming social, economic, and ideological material realities is an area of expanding interest in archaeology. Although the Anishinaabeg were an early and vital focus of cultural anthropological studies on nonhumans given their significant relationships with other-than-human persons, known to them as manitou, emerging archaeologies advancing this topic are not largely centered on ancestral Anishinaabeg sites and artifacts. This article analyzes a set of nonvessel ceramic artifacts from Late Woodland archaeological sites in the Inland Waterway in northern Michigan, which are interpreted to be ceramic renderings of manitou. I argue that these were manitou-in-clay, vibrant relational entities that are brought into being for and through use in ceremonial perspective practices related to Mishipishu—a complexly powerful, seductive, and dangerous nonhuman being known as the head of all water spirits. I contextualize the making and breaking of Mishipishu manitou-in-clay as acts of petition by hunter-fishers who had been seduced by this manitou in dreams, as they headed out on necessary but high-risk early-spring resource harvesting in the inland lakes of the Inland Waterway. This case advances insights into how relationships with other-than-human persons were coproductive of the world in the northern Great Lakes region during the Late Woodland period.
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Jones, Andrew Meirion. "Relational Engagements of the Indigenous Americas: Alterity, Ontology, and Shifting Paradigms. MELISSA R. BALTUS and SARAH E. BAIRES (editors), 2017. Lexington Books, Lanham, Maryland. xv + 167 pp. $90.00 (hardcover), ISBN 9781498555357." American Antiquity 83, no. 3 (May 29, 2018): 569–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2018.28.

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Gillespie, Susan D. "Relational Identities and Other-than-Human Agency in Archaeology. ELEANOR HARRISON-BUCK and JULIA A. HENDON, editors. 2018. University Press of Colorado, Louisville. vi + 296 pp. $73.00 (hardcover), ISBN 978-1-60732-746-2." American Antiquity 84, no. 4 (June 26, 2019): 762–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2019.46.

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Christianson, J. R., and Malin Lennartsson. "I sang och sate: Relationer mellan kvinnor och man i 1600-talets Smaland. [In Bed and Board: Relations between Women and Men in Seventeenth-Century Smaland]." American Historical Review 106, no. 1 (February 2001): 275. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2652392.

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Oliveira, Antonio Jose Silva. "A Terceira Fase da Revista Maranhense: Artes, Ciências e Letras." Revista Maranhense: Artes, Ciências e Letras 1, no. 1 (2022): 8–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.29327/275841.1.1-1.

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Ferreira, Isabel Maria Sousa, Clovis Bosco Mendonça Oliveira, Carlos Cesar Costa, and Antonio José Silva Oliveira. "Sistema de Transmissão Óptico de Ondas Eletromagnéticas em Meios Contínuos." Revista Maranhense: Artes, Ciências e Letras 1, no. 1 (2022): 70–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.29327/275841.1.1-5.

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Bastos Filho, Othon, Joina Alves Bomfim, and Teodora Torres. "O Uso de Ferramentas Tecnológicas Digitais no Ensino." Revista Maranhense: Artes, Ciências e Letras 1, no. 1 (2022): 19–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.29327/275841.1.1-2.

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Li, Xiao-Dong, Jia-Wen Pang, and Qing-Zhou Zhai. "Spectrophotometric determination of bisazo dye malachite green in water sample." DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT 266 (2022): 197–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.5004/dwt.2022.28634.

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Maru, Muluwork, Feleke Zewge, Demeke Kifle, and Endalkachew Sahle-Demissie. "Biodesalination of brackish water coupled with lipid production using native Scenedesmus sp. isolated from a saline lake in Ethiopia, Lake Beseka." DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT 266 (2022): 39–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.5004/dwt.2022.28618.

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Li, Fang, Zhengwen Lin, Huanqing Zhai, and Xinyu Liu. "The treatment of Pb(II) ions in wastewater by electrosorption." DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT 266 (2022): 163–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.5004/dwt.2022.28648.

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Ibrahim, Ahmed, Muhammad S. Vohra, Salem A. Bahadi, Sagheer A. Onaizi, Mohammed H. Essa, and Tariq Mohammed. "Heavy metals adsorption onto graphene oxide: effect of mixed systems and response surface methodology modeling." DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT 266 (2022): 78–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.5004/dwt.2022.28615.

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Fatema-Tuj-Zohra, Fatema-Tuj-Zohra, Sobur Ahmed, Razia Sultana, Md Nurnabi, and Md Zahangir Alam. "Removal of Cr(III) from tanning effluent using adsorbent prepared from peanut shell." DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT 266 (2022): 91–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.5004/dwt.2022.28621.

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Khelladi, Racha Medjda Bouchenak, and Abdelghani Chiboub Fellah. "Study of the performance of the drinking water supply network: case of the new urban pole of Boujlida (City of Tlemcen, Algeria)." DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT 266 (2022): 49–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.5004/dwt.2022.28624.

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Ali, Fateh, Aydan Elçi, Ali Nawaz Siyal, Babar Ali Baig, Abdul Nabi Jakhrani, Sanaullah Dehraj, and Ghansham Das. "Synthesis and characterization of CdCr-NO3 layered double hydroxides nanostructures for Cr(VI) ions adsorption: factorial design and statistical analysis for multivariate sorption optimization." DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT 266 (2022): 101–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.5004/dwt.2022.28622.

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Murtaza, Ghulam, and Muhammad Usman. "Assessment of various heavy metals level in groundwater and soil at tannery manufacturing areas of three mega cities (Sialkot, Lahore and Karachi) of Pakistan." DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT 266 (2022): 121–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.5004/dwt.2022.28640.

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Seid-Mohammadi, Abdolmotaleb, Ghorban Asgari, Reza Shokoohi, Parastoo Shahbazi, and Abdollah Dargahi. "Effect of operation conditions on alkalinity production from alkaline substances used in anaerobic wastewater treatment system." DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT 266 (2022): 62–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.5004/dwt.2022.28651.

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Everton, Gustavo Oliveira, Ana Patricia Matos Pereira, Maria Gulia Alves Carneiro Felizardo, Thaylanna Pinto de Lima, Joao Pedro Mesquita Oliveira, Cassiano Vasques, and Victor Elias Mouchrek Filho. "CHEMICAL PROFILE AND BIOLOGICAL EFFECT OF OIL-IN-WATER NANOEMULSIONS (O/A) INCORPORATED WITH ESSENTIAL OILS." Revista Maranhense: Artes, Ciências e Letras 1, no. 1 (2022): 31–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.29327/275841.1.1-4.

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Yang, Yong, Xiaotong Ren, Yiqiao Li, Shihe Zhou, Kun Zhang, and Shengqiang Shen. "Research on critical mode transferring characteristics for adjustable thermal vapor compressor in MED-TVC system." DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT 266 (2022): 13–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.5004/dwt.2022.28655.

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Song, Jitian, Xu Liu, Dongqi Shi, Shanlin Zhou, Hang Su, Xiaoxu Bi, Kaijie Cai, and Wei Tian. "Effect of ultrasonic distillation on performance parameters of seawater desalination and optimization of performance ratio." DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT 266 (2022): 27–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.5004/dwt.2022.28601.

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Pires, Raimundo Nonato Pinheiro. "Formação Docente: uma análise das funções estéticas da metáfora dos provérbios da obra "Ãmor por Anexins" de Arthur Azevedo no Contexto da Educação de Jovens e Adultos integrada à Educação Profissional - EJATEC." Revista Maranhense: Artes, Ciências e Letras 1, no. 1 (2022): 82–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.29327/275841.1.1-6.

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Castro, Luiz Eduardo Nochi, Antonio Henrique Meira, Lariana Negrão Beraldo Almeida, Giane Gonçalves Lenzi, and Leda Maria Saragiotto Colpini. "Experimental design and optimization of textile dye photodiscoloration using Zn/TiO2 catalysts." DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT 266 (2022): 173–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.5004/dwt.2022.28599.

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Fujiwara, Masahiro, and Shinobu Yamauchi. "Energy-efficient compact multi-stage solar desalination by heat recovery with siphon mechanism for seawater feeding." DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT 266 (2022): 1–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.5004/dwt.2022.28625.

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Barhoumi, Afef, Sana Ncib, Wided Bouguerra, and Elimame Elaloui. "Techno-economic assessment of Ni removal from industrial wastewater by electrocoagulation using rectangular aluminium electrodes." DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT 266 (2022): 143–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.5004/dwt.2022.28644.

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Amaral, Henrique Mariano Costa do. "High Order Compact Method using Exponential Difference Schemes in the Solution of the Convectiove Diffusion Equation." Revista Maranhense: Artes, Ciências e Letras 1, no. 1 (2022): 47–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.29327/275841.1.1-3.

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Aravind, P., and J. Sumathi. "Modeling of dissolved oxygen parameter and optimization using RSM and ANN for paint industry effluent in semi batch fermenter." DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT 266 (2022): 186–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.5004/dwt.2022.28610.

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Cheng, Yajuan, Xinyue Ma, Yanxu Chi, and Xiaoli Ma. "Adsorption of Zn2+ in wastewater by vinylamine modified weathered coal." DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT 266 (2022): 110–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.5004/dwt.2022.28623.

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Naggar, Ahmed H., and Al-Sayed A. Bakr. "Efficient removal of iron from groundwater by dual-media filter." DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT 266 (2022): 70–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.5004/dwt.2022.28574.

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Din, Muhammad Imran, Rida Khalid, Zaib Hussain, Iqra Majeed, Jawayria Najeeb, and Muhammad Arshad. "Preparation of activated carbon from Salvadora persica for the removal of Cu(II) ions from aqueous media." DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT 266 (2022): 131–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.5004/dwt.2022.28641.

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Song, Xiaoli, Yuxiu Fu, Yaming Pang, Liguo Gao, and Xiangrong Ma. "Preparation of Zn2+-Ni2+-Fe3+-LDHs and study on photocatalytic degradation of phenol." DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT 266 (2022): 154–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.5004/dwt.2022.28645.

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Jeffery, Tom. "Towards an Eco-decolonial Museology: A critical realist analysis of the crises of South African museums." Southern African Journal of Environmental Education 37 (September 28, 2021). http://dx.doi.org/10.4314/sajee.v37i1.1.

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South African museums face multivalent, simultaneous crises. The MELD dialectical framework of critical realist philosophy can be used to explore potential for a deep reimagining of museum theory and practice that may generate a new, relational mode better able than persistent dualist modes to respond to complex, emergent crises. This has been conceived by the author (Jeffery, 2021) as an ecological-decolonial, or eco-decolonial, mode of museology, and is further developed in the present analysis. At 1M, the MELD analysis surfaces the implicit neoliberal ontology of South African museum work and the emergent paradox of ‘emancipatory neoliberalism’. This paradox is generative of a number of constraints on practice and agency, including commodification of heritage, a restrictive form of official memory, and quantitative management practice. These limit potential for museums to respond to complex crises that require relational capabilities. 2E explores the potential negation of these constraints. To disrupt the principle of collection as the grounding ontological activity of museum practice may disrupt the implicit neoliberal ontology. This may contribute to emergent, sophisticated socialecological trends in museum practice, both in South Africa and internationally. At 3L, a dialectical view on the concept of cultural landscape offers a relational frame for an eco-decolonial museum practice that may better respond to the crises faced by museums. The practical implications of the eco-decolonial approach are considered at 4D. Keywords: museum practice, critical realism, ontology, eco-decolonial, collection, cultural landscape
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Jeffery, Thomas Carnegie. "Critical Realist Philosophy and the Possibility of an Eco-decolonial Museology." Museum & Society, March 8, 2021, 48–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.29311/mas.v19i1.3231.

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New forms of museum practice that explore the dynamics of social and ecological processes as interlinked systems are increasingly urgent. Critical realist philosophy is used to consider the emergence of tensions between museological processes of decolonization and ecologization, and potentials for their resolution into a new form of practice, which is conceptualized as eco-decolonial. The analysis is focused on South African museums, but is contextualized within international theory and practice. An exploration of the ontology of museum work surfaces a core tension in that trends towards a relational and emancipatory practice are paradoxically embedded within neoliberal ideology. Neoliberalism depends on and perpetuates the problematic human-nature dualism of the colonial era, and constrains the development of progressive social-ecological forms of museum practice. The analysis explores potentials for the resolution of this tension, in a contribution towards the transformation of the philosophical and theoretical frameworks of museum practice.
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"Claims and Reality of New Museology: Case Studies in Canada, the United States and Mexico." Cadernos de Sociomuseologia, July 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.36572/csm.book_07.

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In my work, I like to go back to the source, and I love those moments when we come across historical documents that prefigure, spark or express ideas very similar to those we are developing now, with the sense of breaking new ground... Suddenly we’re not alone anymore. In fact, we’re in good company. This doctoral dissertation, originally published in 1988, could almost be considered a historical document today. I reread the opening sentence: a 1985 quote from Hugues de Varine on the museum as a perfect tool for social transformation. Decades have since gone by. New museology has become sociomuseology and various other kinds of community-oriented museologies: participative, collaborative, relational, engaged, even activist… And yet the question of the social role of museums is timelier than ever, discussed and debated at all levels of contemporary museum practice. (…) For several years now, new museology has, in its current adaptations, experienced a significant revival. In many countries, museums are exploring and practicing participatory museologies in collaboration with their communities. These approaches are part of a great and ongoing societal transformation: the creation of a true cultural democracy based on the principles of equity, diversity and inclusion. Against the backdrop of shifting cultural and power relations, many museums are developing innovative approaches not only to reflect these new realities, but to become agents of change, involved in the construction of new social imaginaries that engage a plurality of voices. How can museums do more to contribute to social and cultural justice, economic development, individual and collective well-being and a sustainable future? What real impact can they have on individuals and communities? Can they change the world? The questions that have concerned me for so long are as resonant now as they were four decades ago. I hope this text will be “good company” for today’s museum professionals. Andrea Hauenschild
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Voss, Barbara L. "Disrupting Cultures of Harassment in Archaeology: Social-Environmental and Trauma-Informed Approaches to Disciplinary Transformation." American Antiquity, March 30, 2021, 1–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2021.19.

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This article is the second in a two-part series that analyzes current research on harassment in archaeology. Both qualitative and quantitative studies, along with activist narratives and survivor testimonials, have established that harassment is occurring in archaeology at epidemic rates. These studies have also identified key patterns in harassment in archaeology that point to potential interventions that may prevent harassment, support survivors, and hold perpetrators accountable. This article reviews five key obstacles to change in the disciplinary culture of archaeology: normalization, exclusionary practices, fraternization, gatekeeping, and obstacles to reporting. Two public health paradigms—the social-environmental model and trauma-informed approaches—are used to identify interventions that can be taken at all levels of archaeological practice: individual, relational, organizational, community, and societal.
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CARVALHO, LUCIANA MENEZES DE. "O Comitê Internacional para a Museologia (ICOFOM/ICOM) e a relação de um coletivo internacional com os fundamentos, a disseminação e a consolidação de uma disciplina." Anais do Museu Paulista: História e Cultura Material 30 (2022). http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1982-02672022v30e13.

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RESUMO O artigo apresenta a importância do Comitê Internacional do Conselho Internacional de Museus (ICOM) para fundamentar, disseminar e consolidar a Museologia como disciplina científica. A investigação tem caráter exploratório e descritivo, com suporte metodológico nas abordagens de pesquisa, revisão bibliográfica e documental, e análise de conteúdo do material pesquisado. A história do Comitê Internacional para a Museologia (ICOFOM) foi dividida em três períodos, demarcados a partir da existência de três publicações importantes pertencentes ao órgão: o Museological Working Papers (MuWoP), que construiu os fundamentos para a Museologia como disciplina científica; o ICOFOM Study Series (ISS), o periódico mais importante do ICOFOM, publicado até hoje, potencializando a amplitude e o alcance das discussões ao redor do globo e disseminando a ideia da Museologia como disciplina relevante aos museus; por fim, o Dictionnaire, resultado de antiga ideia no âmbito do ICOM que visava a criação de um glossário controlado de termos específicos para a Museologia. Essa última obra pode ser considerada como parte do processo de consolidação de uma disciplina que teve início no séculolXX e foi elaborada a partir do protagonismo de um grupo hegemônico no âmbito do Comitê Internacional do ICOM, que reivindicou para si o protagonismo dessa ação.
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Troncoso, Andrés. "Ontologies of Rock Art: Images, Relational Approaches, and Indigenous Knowledges. Oscar Moro-Abadía and Martin Porr, editors. 2021. Routledge, New York. xxvi + 441 pp. $160.00 (hardcover), ISBN 978-0-367-33780-3. $48.95 (e-book), ISBN 978-0-429-32186-3." American Antiquity, December 7, 2022, 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2022.78.

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MIRANDA, Serge, and Gabriel MOPOLO-MOKE. "Modèles objet-relationnel et serveurs universels." Traçabilité, February 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.51257/a-v1-h3269.

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CHRISMENT, Martial. "Transposition d’un modèle objet dans un contexte relationnel." Technologies logicielles Architectures des systèmes, May 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.51257/a-v1-h3270.

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Pilcher, Jeremy, and Saskia Vermeylen. "From Loss of Objects to Recovery of Meanings: Online Museums and Indigenous Cultural Heritage." M/C Journal 11, no. 6 (October 14, 2008). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.94.

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IntroductionThe debate about the responsibility of museums to respect Indigenous peoples’ rights (Kelly and Gordon; Butts) has caught our attention on the basis of our previous research experience with regard to the protection of the tangible and intangible heritage of the San (former hunter gatherers) in Southern Africa (Martin and Vermeylen; Vermeylen, Contextualising; Vermeylen, Life Force; Vermeylen et al.; Vermeylen, Land Rights). This paper contributes to the critical debate about curatorial practices and the recovery of Indigenous peoples’ cultural practices and explores how museums can be transformed into cultural centres that “decolonise” their objects while simultaneously providing social agency to marginalised groups such as the San. Indigenous MuseumTraditional methods of displaying Indigenous heritage are now regarded with deep suspicion and resentment by Indigenous peoples (Simpson). A number of related issues such as the appropriation, ownership and repatriation of culture together with the treatment of sensitive and sacred materials and the stereotyping of Indigenous peoples’ identity (Carter; Simpson) have been identified as the main problems in the debate about museum curatorship and Indigenous heritage. The poignant question remains whether the concept of a classical museum—in the sense of how it continues to classify, value and display non-Western artworks—will ever be able to provide agency to Indigenous peoples as long as “their lives are reduced to an abstract set of largely arbitrary material items displayed without much sense of meaning” (Stanley 3). Indeed, as Salvador has argued, no matter how much Indigenous peoples have been involved in the planning and implementation of an exhibition, some issues remain problematic. First, there is the problem of representation: who speaks for the group; who should make decisions and under what circumstances; when is it acceptable for “outsiders” to be involved? Furthermore, Salvador raises another area of contestation and that is the issue of intention. As we agree with Salvador, no matter how good the intention to include Indigenous peoples in the curatorial practices, the fact that Indigenous peoples may have a (political) perspective about the exhibition that differs from the ideological foundation of the museum enterprise, is, indeed, a challenge that must not be overlooked in the discussion of the inclusive museum. This relates to, arguably, one of the most important challenges in respect to the concept of an Indigenous museum: how to present the past and present without creating an essentialising “Other”? As Stanley summarises, the modernising agenda of the museum, including those museums that claim to be Indigenous museums, continues to be heavily embedded in the belief that traditional cultural beliefs, practices and material manifestations must be saved. In other words, exhibitions focusing on Indigenous peoples fail to show them as dynamic, living cultures (Simpson). This raises the issue that museums recreate the past (Sepúlveda dos Santos) while Indigenous peoples’ interests can be best described “in terms of contemporaneity” (Bolton qtd. in Stanley 7). According to Bolton, Indigenous peoples’ interest in museums can be best understood in terms of using these (historical) collections and institutions to address contemporary issues. Or, as Sepúlveda dos Santos argues, in order for museums to be a true place of memory—or indeed a true place of recovery—it is important that the museum makes the link between the past and contemporary issues or to use its objects in such a way that these objects emphasize “the persistence of lived experiences transmitted through generations” (29). Under pressure from Indigenous rights movements, the major aim of some museums is now reconciliation with Indigenous peoples which, ultimately, should result in the return of the cultural objects to the originators of these objects (Kelly and Gordon). Using the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act of 1990 (NAGPRA) as an illustration, we argue that the whole debate of returning or recovering Indigenous peoples’ cultural objects to the original source is still embedded in a discourse that emphasises the mummified aspect of these materials. As Harding argues, NAGPRA is provoking an image of “native Americans as mere passive recipients of their cultural identity, beholden to their ancestors and the museum community for the re-creation of their cultures” (137) when it defines cultural patrimony as objects having ongoing historical, traditional or cultural importance, central to the Native American group or culture itself. According to Harding (2005) NAGPRA’s dominating narrative focuses on the loss, alienation and cultural genocide of the objects as long as these are not returned to their originators. The recovery or the return of the objects to their “original” culture has been applauded as one of the most liberating and emancipatory events in recent years for Indigenous peoples. However, as we have argued elsewhere, the process of recovery needs to do more than just smother the object in its past; recovery can only happen when heritage or tradition is connected to the experience of everyday life. One way of achieving this is to move away from the objectification of Indigenous peoples’ cultures. ObjectificationIn our exploratory enquiry about new museum practices our attention was drawn to a recent debate about ownership and personhood within the context of museology (Busse; Baker; Herle; Bell; Geismar). Busse, in particular, makes the point that in order to reformulate curatorial practices it is important to redefine the concept and meaning of objects. While the above authors do not question the importance of the objects, they all argue that the real importance does not lie in the objects themselves but in the way these objects embody the physical manifestation of social relations. The whole idea that objects matter because they have agency and efficacy, and as such become a kind of person, draws upon recent anthropological theorising by Gell and Strathern. Furthermore, we have not only been inspired by Gell’s and Strathern’s approaches that suggests that objects are social persons, we have also been influenced by Appadurai’s and Kopytoff’s defining of objects as biographical agents and therefore valued because of the associations they have acquired throughout time. We argue that by framing objects in a social network throughout its lifecycle we can avoid the recurrent pitfalls of essentialising objects in terms of their “primitive” or “traditional” (aesthetic) qualities and mystifying the identity of Indigenous peoples as “noble savages.” Focusing more on the social network that surrounds a particular object opens up new avenues of enquiry as to how, and to what extent, museums can become more inclusive vis-à-vis Indigenous peoples. It allows moving beyond the current discourse that approaches the history of the (ethnographic) museum from only one dominant perspective. By tracing an artwork throughout its lifecycle a new metaphor can be discovered; one that shows that Indigenous peoples have not always been victims, but maybe more importantly it allows us to show a more complex narrative of the object itself. It gives us the space to counterweight some of the discourses that have steeped Indigenous artworks in a “postcolonial” framework of sacredness and mythical meaning. This is not to argue that it is not important to be reminded of the dangers of appropriating other cultures’ heritage, but we would argue that it is equally important to show that approaching a story from a one-sided perspective will create a dualism (Bush) and reducing the differences between different cultures to a dualistic opposition fails to recognise the fundamental areas of agency (Morphy). In order for museums to enliven and engage with objects, they must become institutions that emphasise a relational approach towards displaying and curating objects. In the next part of this paper we will explore to what extent an online museum could progressively facilitate the process of providing agency to the social relations that link objects, persons, environments and memories. As Solanilla argues, what has been described as cybermuseology may further transform the museum landscape and provide an opportunity to challenge some of the problems identified above (e.g. essentialising practices). Or to quote the museologist Langlais: “The communication and interaction possibilities offered by the Web to layer information and to allow exploration of multiple meanings are only starting to be exploited. In this context, cybermuseology is known as a practice that is knowledge-driven rather than object-driven, and its main goal is to disseminate knowledge using the interaction possibilities of Information Communication Technologies” (Langlais qtd. in Solanilla 108). One thing which shows promise and merits further exploration is the idea of transforming the act of exhibiting ethnographic objects accompanied by texts and graphics into an act of cyber discourse that allows Indigenous peoples through their own voices and gestures to involve us in their own history. This is particularly the case since Indigenous peoples are using technologies, such as the Internet, as a new medium through which they can recuperate their histories, land rights, knowledge and cultural heritage (Zimmerman et al.). As such, new technology has played a significant role in the contestation and formation of Indigenous peoples’ current identity by creating new social and political spaces through visual and narrative cultural praxis (Ginsburg).Online MuseumsIt has been acknowledged for some time that a presence on the Web might mitigate the effects of what has been described as the “unassailable voice” in the recovery process undertaken by museums (Walsh 77). However, a museum’s online engagement with an Indigenous culture may have significance beyond undercutting the univocal authority of a museum. In the case of the South African National Gallery it was charged with challenging the extent to which it represents entrenched but unacceptable political ideologies. Online museums may provide opportunities in the conservation and dissemination of “life stories” that give an account of an Indigenous culture as it is experienced (Solanilla 105). We argue that in engaging with Indigenous cultural heritage a distinction needs to be drawn between data and the cognitive capacity to learn, “which enables us to extrapolate and learn new knowledge” (Langlois 74). The problem is that access to data about an Indigenous culture does not necessarily lead to an understanding of its knowledge. It has been argued that cybermuseology loses the essential interpersonal element that needs to be present if intangible heritage is understood as “the process of making sense that is generally transmitted orally and through face-to-face experience” (Langlois 78). We agree that the online museum does not enable a reality to be reproduced (Langlois 78).This does not mean that cybermuseology should be dismissed. Instead it provides the opportunity to construct a valuable, but completely new, experience of cultural knowledge (Langlois 78). The technology employed in cybermuseology provides the means by which control over meaning may, at least to some extent, be dispersed (Langlois 78). In this way online museums provide the opportunity for Indigenous peoples to challenge being subjected to manipulation by one authoritative museological voice. One of the ways this may be achieved is through interactivity by enabling the use of social tagging and folksonomy (Solanilla 110; Trant 2). In these processes keywords (tags) are supplied and shared by visitors as a means of accessing museum content. These tags in turn give rise to a classification system (folksonomy). In the context of an online museum engaging with an Indigenous culture we have reservations about the undifferentiated interactivity on the part of all visitors. This issue may be investigated further by examining how interactivity relates to communication. Arguably, an online museum is engaged in communicating Indigenous cultural heritage because it helps to keep it alive and pass it on to others (Langlois 77). However, enabling all visitors to structure online access to that culture may be detrimental to the communication of knowledge that might otherwise occur. The narratives by which Indigenous cultures, rather than visitors, order access to information about their cultures may lead to the communication of important knowledge. An illustration of the potential of this approach is the work Sharon Daniel has been involved with, which enables communities to “produce knowledge and interpret their own experience using media and information technologies” (Daniel, Palabras) partly by means of generating folksonomies. One way in which such issues may be engaged with in the context of online museums is through the argument that database and narrative in such new media objects are opposed to each other (Manovich, New Media 225). A new media work such as an online museum may be understood to be comprised of a database and an interface to that database. A visitor to an online museum may only move through the content of the database by following those paths that have been enabled by those who created the museum (Manovich, New Media 227). In short it is by means of the interface provided to the viewer that the content of the database is structured into a narrative (Manovich, New Media: 226). It is possible to understand online museums as constructions in which narrative and database aspects are emphasized to varying degrees for users. There are a variety of museum projects in which the importance of the interface in creating a narrative interface has been acknowledged. Goldblum et al. describe three examples of websites in which interfaces may be understood as, and explicitly designed for, carrying meaning as well as enabling interactivity: Life after the Holocaust; Ripples of Genocide; and Yearbook 2006.As with these examples, we suggest that it is important there be an explicit engagement with the significance of interface(s) for online museums about Indigenous peoples. The means by which visitors access content is important not only for the way in which visitors interact with material, but also as to what is communicated about, culture. It has been suggested that the curator’s role should be moved away from expertly representing knowledge toward that of assisting people outside the museum to make “authored statements” within it (Bennett 11). In this regard it seems to us that involvement of Indigenous peoples with the construction of the interface(s) to online museums is of considerable significance. Pieterse suggests that ethnographic museums should be guided by a process of self-representation by the “others” portrayed (Pieterse 133). Moreover it should not be forgotten that, because of the separation of content and interface, it is possible to have access to a database of material through more than one interface (Manovich, New Media 226-7). Online museums provide a means by which the artificial homogenization of Indigenous peoples may be challenged.We regard an important potential benefit of an online museum as the replacement of accessing material through the “unassailable voice” with the multiplicity of Indigenous voices. A number of ways to do this are suggested by a variety of new media artworks, including those that employ a database to rearrange information to reveal underlying cultural positions (Paul 100). Paul discusses the work of, amongst others, George Legrady. She describes how it engages with the archive and database as sites that record culture (104-6). Paul specifically discusses Legrady’s work Slippery Traces. This involved viewers navigating through more than 240 postcards. Viewers of work were invited to “first chose one of three quotes appearing on the screen, each of which embodies a different perspective—anthropological, colonialist, or media theory—and thus provides an interpretive angle for the experience of the projects” (104-5). In the same way visitors to an online museum could be provided with a choice of possible Indigenous voices by which its collection might be experienced. We are specifically interested in the implications that such approaches have for the way in which online museums could engage with film. Inspired by Basu’s work on reframing ethnographic film, we see the online museum as providing the possibility of a platform to experiment with new media art in order to expose the meta-narrative(s) about the politics of film making. As Basu argues, in order to provoke a feeling of involvement with the viewer, it is important that the viewer becomes aware “of the plurality of alternative readings/navigations that they might have made” (105). As Weinbren has observed, where a fixed narrative pathway has been constructed by a film, digital technology provides a particularly effective means to challenge it. It would be possible to reveal the way in which dominant political interests regarding Indigenous cultures have been asserted, such as for example in the popular film The Gods Must Be Crazy. New media art once again provides some interesting examples of the way ideology, that might otherwise remain unclear, may be exposed. Paul describes the example of Jennifer and Kevin McCoy’s project How I learned. The work restructures a television series Kung Fu by employing “categories such as ‘how I learned about blocking punches,’ ‘how I learned about exploiting workers,’ or ‘how I learned to love the land’” (Paul 103) to reveal in greater clarity, than otherwise might be possible, the cultural stereotypes used in the visual narratives of the program (Paul 102-4). We suggest that such examples suggest the ways in which online museums could work to reveal and explore the existence not only of meta-narratives expressed by museums as a whole, but also the means by which they are realised within existing items held in museum collections.ConclusionWe argue that the agency for such reflective moments between the San, who have been repeatedly misrepresented or underrepresented in exhibitions and films, and multiple audiences, may be enabled through the generation of multiple narratives within online museums. We would like to make the point that, first and foremost, the theory of representation must be fully understood and acknowledged in order to determine whether, and how, modes of online curating are censorious. As such we see online museums having the potential to play a significant role in illuminating for both the San and multiple audiences the way that any form of representation or displaying restricts the meanings that may be recovered about Indigenous peoples. ReferencesAppadurai, Arjun. The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1986. Bal, Mieke. “Exhibition as Film.” Exhibition Experiments. Ed. Sharon Macdonald and Paul Basu. Malden: Blackwell Publishing 2007. 71-93. Basu, Paul. “Reframing Ethnographic Film.” Rethinking Documentary. Eds. Thomas Austin and Wilma de Jong. Maidenhead: Open U P, 2008. 94-106.Barringer, Tim, and Tom Flynn. Colonialism and the Object: Empire, Material Culture and the Museum. London: Routledge, 1998. Baxandall, Michael. "Exhibiting Intention: Some Preconditions of the Visual Display of Culturally Purposeful Objects." Exhibiting Cultures. Ed. Ivan Karp and Steven Lavine. Washington: Smithsonian Institution P. 1991. 33-41.Bell, Joshua. “Promiscuous Things: Perspectives on Cultural Property through Photographs in the Purari Delta of Papa New Guinea.” International Journal of Cultural Property 15 (2008): 123-39.Bennett, Tony. “The Political Rationality of the Museum.” Continuum: The Australian Journal of Media & Culture 3 No.1 (1990). 8 Oct. 2008 ‹http://wwwmcc.murdoch.edu.au/ReadingRoom/3.1/Bennett.html›. Bolton, Lissant. “The Object in View: Aborigines, Melanesians and Museums.” Emplaced Myth: Space, Narrative and Knowledge in Australia and Papua New Guinea. Eds. Alan Rumsey & James Weiner. Honolulu: U of Hawai`i P. 2001. 215-32. Bush, Martin. “Shifting Sands: Museum Representations of Science and Indigenous Knowledge Traditions.” Open Museum Journal 7 (2005). 8 Oct. 2008 ‹http://archive.amol.org.au/craft/omjournal/volume7/docs/MBush_ab.asp?ID=›.Busse, Mark. “Museums and the Things in Them Should Be Alive.” International Journal of Cultural Property 15 (2008): 189-200.Butts, David. “Māori and Museums: the Politics of Indigenous Recognition.” Museums, Society and Inequality. Ed. Richard Sandell. London: Routledge, 2002. 225-43.Casey, Dawn. “Culture Wars: Museums, Politics and Controversy.” Open Museum Journal 6 (2003). 8 Oct. 2008 ‹http://archive.amol.org.au/omj/volume6/casey.pdf›.Carter, J. “Museums and Indigenous Peoples in Canada.” Museums and the Appropriation of Culture. Ed. Susan Pearce. London: Athlone P, 1994. 213-33.Carolin, Clare, and Cathy Haynes. “The Politics of Display: Ann-Sofi Sidén’s Warte Mal!, Art History and Social Documentary.” Exhibition Experiments. Eds. Sharon Macdonald and Paul Basu. Malden: Blackwell Publishing, 2007. 154-74.Cooper, Jonathan. “Beyond the On-line Museum: Participatory Virtual Exhibitions.” Museums and the Web 2006: Proceedings. Eds. Jennifer Trant and David Bearman. Albuquerque: Archives & Museum Informatics, 2006. 8 Oct. 2008 ‹www.archimuse.com/mw2006/papers/cooper/cooper.html›.Daniel, Sharon. “The Database: An Aesthetics of Dignity.” Database Aesthetics: Art in the Age of Information Overflow. Ed. Victoria Vesner. Minneapolis: U of Minnesota P, 2007. 142-82.Daniel, Sharon, and Casa Segura. “Need_ X_ Change.” 8 Oct. 2008 ‹http://arts.ucsc.edu/sdaniel/need/›.Daniel, Sharon. “Palabras” 8 Oct. 2008 ‹http://palabrastranquilas.ucsc.edu/›.Daniel, Sharon, and Erik Loyer. “Public Secrets.” Vectors. Winter (2007). 8 Oct. 2008 ‹http://vectors.usc.edu/index.php?page=7&projectId=57›.Dietz, Steve. “Curating (on) the Web.” Museums and the Web 1998: Proceedings. Eds. Jennifer Trant and David Bearman. Toronto: Archives & Museum Informatics, 1998. 8 Oct. 2008 ‹http://www.archimuse.com/mw98/papers/dietz/dietz_curatingtheweb.html›.Dietz, Steve. “Telling Stories: Procedural Authorship and Extracting Meanings from Museum Databases.” Museums and the Web 1999: Proceedings. Eds. Jennifer Trant and David Bearman. New Orleans: Archives & Museum Informatics, 1999. 8 Oct. 2008 ‹http://www.archimuse.com/mw99/papers/dietz/dietz.html›.Gell, Alfred. Art and Agency: An Anthropological Theory. Oxford: Clarendon P, 1998.Geismar, Haidy. (2008) “Cultural Property, Museums, and the Pacific: Reframing the Debates.” International Journal of Cultural Property 15: 109-22.Ginsburg, Faye. “Resources of Hope: Learning from the Local in a Transnational Era.” Indigenous Cultures in an Interconnected World. Ed. Claire Smith & Graeme Ward. St Leonards: Allen & Unwin, 2000. 27-47.Goldblum, Josh, Adele O’Dowd, and Traci Sym. “Considerations and Strategies for Creating Interactive Narratives.” Museums and the Web 2007: Proceedings. Ed. Jennifer Trant and David Bearman. Toronto: Archives & Museum Informatics, 2007. 8 Oct. 2008 ‹www.archimuse.com/mw2007/papers/goldblum/goldblum.html›.Guenther, Matthias. “Contemporary Bushman Art, Identity Politics, and the Primitive Discourse.” The Politics of Egalitarianism: Theory and Practice. Ed. Jacqueline Solway. New York: Berghahn Books, 2006. 159-88. Harding, Sarah. “Culture, Commodification, and Native American Cultural Patrimony.” Rethinking Commodification: Cases and Readings in Law and Culture. Ed. Martha Ertman and Joan Williams. New York: New York U P, 2005. 137-63.Herle, Anita. “Relational Objects: Connecting People and Things through Pasifika Styles.” International Journal of Cultural Property 15 (2008): 159-79.Hoopes, John. “The Future of the Past: Archaeology and Anthropology on the World Wide Web.” Archives and Museum Informatics 11 (1997): 87-105.“South African National Gallery.” Iziko: Museums of Cape Town. 8 Oct. 2008 ‹http://www.iziko.org.za/iziko/ourname.html›.Jones, Anna. “Exploding Canons: The Anthropology of Museums.” Annual Review of Anthropology 22 (1993): 201-20. Kelly, Lynda, and Phil Gordon. “Developing a Community of Practice: Museums and Reconciliation in Australia.” Museums, Society and Inequality. Ed. Richard Sandell. London: Routledge, 2002. 153-74.Kopytoff, Igor. “The Cultural Biography of Things: Commoditization as Process.” The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective. Ed. Arjun Appadurai. Cambridge: Harvard U P, 1986. 64-91. Kreps, Christina. Theorising Cultural Heritage. Indigenous Curation as Intangible Cultural Heritage: Thoughts on the Relevance of the 2003 UNESCO Convention. Washington: Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, 2005.Langlois, Dominique. “Cybermuseology and Intangible Cultural Heritage.” Intersection Conference 2005. York U: Toronto, 2005. 8 Oct. 2008 ‹http://yorku.ca/topia/docs/conference/langlais.pdf›.“Life after the Holocaust.” United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. 8 Oct. 2008 ‹http://www.ushmm.org/museum/exhibit/online/life_after_holocaust/›.Manovich, Lev. The Language of New Media. Cambridge: MIT P, 2001.———. Making Art of Databases. Rotterdam: V2_Publishing/NAi Publishers, 2003.Martin, George, and Saskia Vermeylen. “Intellectual Property, Indigenous Knowledge, and Biodiversity.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 16 (2005): 27-48. Martínez, David. “Re-visioning the Hopi Fourth World: Dan Namingha, Indigenous Modernism, and the Hopivotskwani.” Art History 29 (2006): 145-72. McGee, Julie. “Restructuring South African Museums: Reality and Rhetoric within Cape Town.” New Museum Theory and Practice: An Introduction. Ed. Janet Marstine. Oxford: Blackwell, 2006. 178-99.McTavish, Lianne. “Visiting the Virtual Museum: Art and Experience Online.” New Museum Theory and Practice: An Introduction. Ed. Janet Marstine. Oxford: Blackwell, 2006. 226-45.Morphy, Howard. “Elite Art for Cultural Elites: Adding Value to Indigenous Arts.” Indigenous Cultures in an Interconnected World. Ed. Claire Smith and Graeme Ward. St Leonards: Allen & Unwin, 2000. 129- 43.Paul, Christiane. “The Database as System and Cultural Form: Anatomies of Cultural Narratives.” Database Aesthetics: Art in the Age of Information Overflow. Ed. Victoria Vesner. Minneapolis: U of Minnesota P, 2007. 95-109.Pearce, Susan. Museums and the Appropriation of Culture. London: Athlone P, 1994.Pieterse, Jan Nederveen. “Multiculturalism and Museums: Discourse about Others in the Age of Globalisation.” Theory, Culture & Society 14. 4 (1997): 123-46.“Ripples of Genocide: Journey through Eastern Congo.” United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. 8 Oct. 2008 ‹www.ushmm.org/museum/exhibit/online/congojournal›.Salvador, Mari Lyn. “‘The Kuna Way’: Museums, Exhbitions, and the Politics of Representation of Kuna Art.” Museum Anthropology 18 (1994): 48-52. Samis, Peter. “Artwork as Interface” Archives and Museum Informatics 13.2 (1999): 191-98.Sandell, Richard. “Museums and the Combating of Social Inequality: Roles, Responsibilities, Resistance.” Museums, Society and Inequality. Ed. Richard Sandell. London: Routledge, 2002. 3-23.Seaman, Bill. “Recombinant Poetics and Related Database Aesthetics.” Database Aesthetics: Art in the Age of Information Overflow. Ed. Victoria Vesner. 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