Conferință științifică internațională, Chișinău, 22-23 septembrie 2020, ediția a II-a
~ 615 ~
But is the ethnographic museum really so limited? Can the ethnographic museum really not
tell stories that are beyond the limitations of the political conditions in which the museum is
founded and operates? As even the curatorial staff at TPM is not quite
ready to give up on the
ethnographic approach altogether even as they move away from the ethnographic label, these
questions demand more than a yes/no answer.
Further, it is my hope that these questions can and will be explored in a South-east/South-
east conversation. Beyond TPM, and other Peranakan-focused museums, South-east Asia has
recently witnessed the growth of “folk museums” and small “museums” in people’s houses. Their
popularity draws from the juncture of
cultural heritage and tourism, but at least one region-
al specialist has opined that they are “often better than national and commercial museums in
terms of being able to tell stories”.
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South-east Europe has not experimented with the museum
form perhaps quite as much in relation to expanding the economic capacity of the heritage and
tourism sectors, however local/village museums, often created through voluntary efforts, have a
long-standing tradition. Perhaps it is time to bring these two regional
traditions into more di-
rect communication, and to explore the future of ethnography in museums from a multilateral
perspective.
representation were conveyed through museum displays through the establishment of subject-object
relations. Whether the fault lies with ethnographic museums themselves, or with the analytical lens
of the anthropologists who study them, the two paradigms
of colonialism and nationalism, expressed
through subject-object relations of representation, continue to dominate European-based research on
ethnographic museums. It is also possible that imperial/national questions continue to dominate the
agenda because little attention is given to museums in many parts of the world that do not fit neatly
into a metropole/colony framework. Museums from the Balkans,
South America, most of Asia, and
the Middle East are largely absent from the record. The main reported development in the MPI col-
lections concerns collaborations between European museums and African ones. Moreover, the issues
of representation remain paramount to the exclusion of nearly all other considerations of the actual
technical and administrative problems faced by museums. Budget limitations,
visitors, events and
programing, physical space, and legal issues are hardly covered as relevant to the “anthropology of the
ethnographic museum”, even though museum curators always mention them.
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John Miksic,
What is Seasia? Talk at Nanyang Technological University
, 25 March, 2019.