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What in the World. A Museum's Subjective Biography (Paperback)
Loot Price: R443
Discovery Miles 4 430
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What in the World. A Museum's Subjective Biography (Paperback)
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Loot Price R443
Discovery Miles 4 430
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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"Indiana Jones and Night at the Museum hardly hold a candle to the
true stories in Pablo Helguera's museum 'biography.' Helguera is a
natural storyteller. He shares the same propensity for insight,
wit, and curiosity as the curators he writes about-the
anthropologists, archeologists, and native folks who found
themselves anchored to a museum, over long careers becoming
specimens themselves, no longer completely in sync with the worlds
they came from or the foreign worlds they came to know. Mining the
history of a museum, Helguera asks questions of these long-gone
curators. The answers, embedded in the archives, are as engaging
and enjoyable as any exhibition on view." -Fred Wilson, artist An
eccentric American professor imports an entire Buddhist temple from
Asia. The first Pacific Northwest Indian anthropologist dies
mysteriously on a river shore in Alaska. A former Massachusetts
farm boy leads the first American archaeological expedition to the
Middle East, where he finds thousands of ancient artifacts but
loses his mind because of it. A German businessman uncovers ancient
clay dinosaur figurines in a small village in Mexico and ignites a
decades-long controversy that is still pits scientists against
Creationists, today. What in the World tells these stories and
more. It is an "unauthorized biography" of the Museum of
Archaeology and Anthropology of the University of Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia, an illustrious institution that has played a key role
in the history of American archaeology. Taking an investigative
approach to the life of the University Museum, Pablo Helguera has
unearthed little-known or forgotten episodes from its past,
spinning intricate threads that reflect on the role of individuals
in forming the culture of museums and their collections.
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