Course ID#: G49.3330
Section: 1
TOPICS IN MUSEUM STUDIES:
Museums and Political Conflict
Elective. 4 points.
In contemporary Museum Studies, it is often said that museums are inherently political
institutions. But how specifically do politics happen in museums? What does "politics"
mean for specific exhibitions and collections and what avenues of political theory emerge
from the museum in general? In this seminar, we will move beyond the general to examine how
specific political concepts took shape in key exhibitioins and museum practices from the
1930s to the present. As such, our challenge will be twofold. On the one hand, we will consider
how political movements have used the museums as an implement for advancing power and influence.
On the other hand, we will consider how museum pracrices have "taken up" politics, so to speak:
how museum objects and officials have engaged and advocated specific political agendas and
outcomes. Case studies will include: Degenerate Art (1937), Paris World Exhibition (1937),
Rivera's "Man at the Crossroads" (1934), The Guggenheim Museum (1959), Yad Mordechai (1965),
Harlem on my Mind (1969), The Perfect Moment (1990), The Last Act (1994), The Jewish Museum of
Bologna (1998), Sensation (1999), The Apartheid Museum (2001), Holocaust Cartoons (2006) among
others. Through these case studies, students will examine the museum's role in the public sphere
and the process whereby exhibitions contribute to--or undermined--key aspects of deliberative
democracy.