Jaanika Vider
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摘要

这篇文章的重点是通过博物馆的来源研究创造的可能性。在反种族主义和非殖民主义运动(如黑人的命也是命)的背景下,本文阐述了当前对出处研究的兴趣,并特别关注由立法法案(如美国的NAGPRA)塑造的民族志博物馆的研究历史,对人类学代表性实践的批判性思考,以及与原始社区的合作工作。以1914年玛丽亚·查普利卡(Maria Czaplicka)在牛津皮特里弗斯博物馆(Pitt Rivers Museum)收藏的西伯利亚藏品为例,我认为,类似于人类学田野调查的广泛而开放的来源研究,可以揭示与博物馆藏品有关的不同叙述。它使我们能够理解这些物品被带到博物馆的原因和方式,它们帮助建立的认知现实,以及这些物品中嵌入的不同文化意义和现实。对Czaplicka藏品的密切历史研究增加了我们对20世纪初民族志研究本质的理解,引起了人们对西伯利亚探险期间不道德获取墓葬和人类遗骸的关注,但也突出了民族志学家与土著东道主之间的密切关系。在西伯利亚的当代田野调查和对这些藏品的创造性参与进一步拓宽了对这些物品起源的理解,这些物品与埃文基人的世界观和生活经验有关。通过这种细致入微的研究,一种“厚重的描述”出现了,使博物馆的解释能够讲述社会中出现的漂移和断层线,将不同的世界观带入一个空间,并在这个空间内解决全球关注的话题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Muuseumikogude potentsiaali kaardistamine päritolu-uuringute kaudu
This article focuses on the possibilities created through provenance research in the museum. Setting out current interest in provenance research against the backdrop of antiracist and decolonial movements such as Black Lives Matter and Rhodes Must Fall, the article focuses specifically on the history of research in ethnographic museums shaped by legislative acts such as NAGPRA in the USA, critical thinking about representational practices in anthropology, and collaborative work with originating communities. Using the Siberian collection acquired by Maria Czaplicka in 1914 and held at the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford as a case study, I argue that broad-ranging and open-ended provenance research akin to anthropological fieldwork allows to uncover different narratives pertaining to museum objects. It enables to understand why and how the objects were brought to the museum, the kinds of epistemic realities they have helped to build but also to attend to different cultural meanings and realities embedded in these objects. A close historical study of the Czaplicka collection has added to our understanding of the nature of ethnographic research in the early 20th century, brought to attention immoral acquisition of grave goods and human remains during the Siberian expedition but also highlighted close relations between ethnographers and their Indigenous hosts. Contemporary fieldwork in Siberia and creative engagement with the collection have further broadened the understanding of the origin of these objects in relation to Evenki worldview and lived experience. Through such nuanced research, a “thick description” emerges that enables a museum interpretation that can speak to the emergence of drifts and fault lines in the society, bring different worldviews into one space, and within that space address topics of global concern.
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