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Collecting has a long tradition in the Middle East but the museum
as a public institution is relatively new. Today there are national
museums for antiquities in most Arab countries. While in some cases
the political and social climate has hindered the foundation of
museums, with existing collections even destroyed at times, the
recent museum boom in the Gulf States is again changing the
outlook. This unique book is the first to explore collecting
practices in archives and museums in the modern Arab world,
featuring case studies of collecting practices in countries ranging
from Egypt and Lebanon to Palestine, Jordan, Iraq and the Gulf, and
providing a theoretical and methodological basis for future
research. The authors are also concerned with investigating the
relationship between past and present, since collecting practices
tell us a great deal not only about the past but also about the
ways we approach the past and present conceptions of our
identities. Collections can be textual as well, as in the stories,
memories or events selected, recalled, and retold in the pages of a
text. As interest in memory studies as well as popular and visual
culture grows in the Arab World, so collecting practices are at the
heart of any critical approach to the past and the present in that
region. The book will be of great interest not only to scholars and
students of the modern Arab world but also to professionals in
museums and collections in the region, as well as around the world.
Collecting has a long tradition in the Middle East but the museum
as a public institution is relatively new. Today there are national
museums for antiquities in most Arab countries. While in some cases
the political and social climate has hindered the foundation of
museums, with existing collections even destroyed at times, the
recent museum boom in the Gulf States is again changing the
outlook. This unique book is the first to explore collecting
practices in archives and museums in the modern Arab world,
featuring case studies of collecting practices in countries ranging
from Egypt and Lebanon to Palestine, Jordan, Iraq and the Gulf, and
providing a theoretical and methodological basis for future
research. The authors are also concerned with investigating the
relationship between past and present, since collecting practices
tell us a great deal not only about the past but also about the
ways we approach the past and present conceptions of our
identities. Collections can be textual as well, as in the stories,
memories or events selected, recalled, and retold in the pages of a
text. As interest in memory studies as well as popular and visual
culture grows in the Arab World, so collecting practices are at the
heart of any critical approach to the past and the present in that
region. The book will be of great interest not only to scholars and
students of the modern Arab world but also to professionals in
museums and collections in the region, as well as around the world.
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