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dc.contributor.author
Burón, Manuel  
dc.contributor.author
Podgorny, Irina  
dc.contributor.author
Richard, Nathalie  
dc.date.available
2024-06-12T13:00:52Z  
dc.date.issued
2024-05  
dc.identifier.citation
Burón, Manuel; Podgorny, Irina; Richard, Nathalie; ‘¿Para qué un museo?’: A reflection from Latin America upon the fragility and necessity of museums; Australian National University; HUmanities Research Journal; 20; 1; 5-2024; 133-150  
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/11336/237945  
dc.description.abstract
we want to emphasise in this article that the perishable nature of collections remains a characteristic of them even today. To think about the museum in terms of its perishable nature, the article presents two Latin American examples. Far from presenting the history and complexity of Latin American museums, this article is a plea for a concept of the museum that acknowledges the idea of impermanence and perishability. For that purpose, we analyse historical circumstances in which the actors asked themselves why this or that museum had been created. We refer to provincial natural history museums in nineteenth-century Argentina and community collections in contemporary Mexico: two different contexts that reflect the importance of the fields of natural history and of anthropology in those countries. These two sections exemplify two historical trends. In the first, museums are understood as places to produce knowledge, linked to the materials needed for a scientific discipline and organised around the objects stored, but not always displayed, in its buildings. The collections analysed in this section as well as in the second, reveal that collecting occurred beyond the metropolis and involved professionals and vocational scientists self-organised around common interests and working in network. The second refers to the late twentieth-century trope on the importance of community museums, namely the need to keep things where they belong. What happens when this is imposed over a community that does not care about museums? Why a museum at all?International trends and temporalities characterise the history of worldwide museums, including those established in the Americas, where historiography has showed the existence of different museum ‘waves’, such as those museums created in the 1820s just after independence: Buenos Aires (1812–1823), Rio de Janeiro (1818), Santiago de Chile (1822), Bogotá en Colombia (1823), Ciudad de México (1825), Lima (1826) and Montevideo (1837).3 In those years, museums emerged everywhere with a port that connected cities to the world, bringing and exporting objects, news and novelties. From Whitby in the UK to Charleston in North Carolina, the 1820s witnessed the establishment of untold numbers of museums, showing that what happened in Ibero-America was part of an international trend that perceived museums as something needed for being fashionable. Miruna Achim has characterised the period that started in the 1820s in the Americas as the ‘trial years’, meaning that museums—sometimes linked to a learned society that promoted the gathering and exchange of data and objects—had fragile existences, menaced by political turmoil and permanent financial crises.4 Later some of those museums were re-founded, reoriented and renamed. Institutional historiographies have treated them as if they had remained the same all through their history, a problem anchored in the idea of permanence that veils the transformations and losses that marked their survival.  
dc.format
application/pdf  
dc.language.iso
eng  
dc.publisher
Australian National University  
dc.rights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess  
dc.rights.uri
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/ar/  
dc.subject
Museums  
dc.subject
Collections  
dc.subject
Mexico  
dc.subject
Argentina  
dc.subject.classification
Historia  
dc.subject.classification
Historia y Arqueología  
dc.subject.classification
HUMANIDADES  
dc.title
‘¿Para qué un museo?’: A reflection from Latin America upon the fragility and necessity of museums  
dc.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article  
dc.type
info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo  
dc.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion  
dc.date.updated
2024-06-10T11:24:54Z  
dc.identifier.eissn
1834-8491  
dc.journal.volume
20  
dc.journal.number
1  
dc.journal.pagination
133-150  
dc.journal.pais
Australia  
dc.journal.ciudad
Canberra  
dc.description.fil
Fil: Burón, Manuel. Universidad Autónoma de Madrid; España  
dc.description.fil
Fil: Podgorny, Irina. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo. Archivo Histórico; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - La Plata; Argentina  
dc.description.fil
Fil: Richard, Nathalie. Le Mans Université.; Francia  
dc.journal.title
HUmanities Research Journal  
dc.relation.alternativeid
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/url/https://press-files.anu.edu.au/downloads/press/n10484/html/09_Buron_et_al.xhtml?referer=&page=12#