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This book reveals the history of the Vatican’s ethnographic
collections by exploring the imperial, scientific, technological,
and religious agendas behind its collecting and curating practices
in the early twentieth century. It focuses on two principal
contributors: the academic, priest, and ‘Pope’s Curator’,
Father Wilhelm Schmidt, SVD, and the missionary and linguist,
Father Franz Kirschbaum, SVD. Their narratives are embedded in a
unique set of comparisons between the ‘liberal humanist ideals’
that underpinned the 1851 Great Exhibition, mid-nineteenth-century
German museology, and the 1925 Pontifical Missionary Exhibition. It
relates to the period of high colonialism and rampant missionary
activity worldwide. It unravels the complicated political and
ideological stance taken by the Catholic Church and its place
within the science/religion debates of its time. Establishing an
essential link between the secular and catholic practices of
collecting and curating ethnographic objects from non-Western
traditions, the author proposes a broader framework for
post-colonial approaches to scholarly studies of ethnographic
collections, including those of the Catholic Church. This book
appeals to students and scholars of anthropology, museum studies,
history, art history, religion, politics, and cultural studies.
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