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Museums and American Intellectual Life, 1876-1926 (Paperback)
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Museums and American Intellectual Life, 1876-1926 (Paperback)
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During the last half of the 19th century, Americans built many of
the country's most celebrated museums, such as the American Museum
of Natural History in New York, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and
Chicago's Field Museum. This text argues that Americans built these
institutions with the confidence that they could collect, organize,
and display the sum of the world's knowledge. Examining various
kinds of museums, the author discovers how museums gave definition
to different bodies of knowledge and how they presented that
knowledge - the world in miniature - to the visiting public. The
study includes familiar places like the Metropolitan Museum of Art
and the Academy of Natural Sciences, but also draws attention to
forgotten ones, like the Philadelphia Commercial Museum, once the
repository for objects from many turn-of-the-century world's fairs.
What emerges from the analysis is that museums of all kinds shared
a belief that knowledge resided in the objects themselves. Using
what Steven Conn has termed an "object-based epistemology," museums
of the late 19th century were on the cutting edge of American
intellectual life. By the first quarter of the 20th century,
however, museums had largely been replaced by research-oriented
universities as places where new knowledge was produced. According
to Conn, not only did this mean a change in the way knowledge was
conceived, but also, and perhaps more importantly, who would have
access to it.
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