A Gathering of Names: On the Categories and Collections of Siberian Shamanic Materials in Late Imperial Russian Museum, 1880-1910

This dissertation is an intellectual history of the ethnographic naming and systematising of Siberian shamanic materials by collectors for late imperial Russian museums, between approximately 1880-1910. The late imperial era was a time of social and political change in the Russian Empire, during whi...

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Main Author: Franz, Marisa Karyl
Other Authors: Klassen, Pamela, Religion, Study of
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/97429
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spelling ftunivtoronto:oai:localhost:1807/97429 2023-05-15T18:45:29+02:00 A Gathering of Names: On the Categories and Collections of Siberian Shamanic Materials in Late Imperial Russian Museum, 1880-1910 Franz, Marisa Karyl Klassen, Pamela Religion, Study of 2019-11-13T18:00:45Z http://hdl.handle.net/1807/97429 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/1807/97429 Collecting Ethnography Imperial Russia Museums Shamanism Siberia 0318 Thesis 2019 ftunivtoronto 2020-06-17T12:27:35Z This dissertation is an intellectual history of the ethnographic naming and systematising of Siberian shamanic materials by collectors for late imperial Russian museums, between approximately 1880-1910. The late imperial era was a time of social and political change in the Russian Empire, during which there was a dramatic increase in the number of local Siberian museums founded. This project approaches Siberia and the local Siberian museums within the context of late imperial Russian scientific modernity to argue that these museums were constructing a new local Siberian intellectual and scientific network of researchers who were defining shamanism through their collections. This project focuses on collectors and the museum communities in the cities of Yakutsk, Irkutsk, and St. Petersburg. It approaches these sites as increasingly interconnected through the academic and personal networks and infrastructural developments that brought increasing numbers of people, willingly and unwillingly, to Siberia at the turn of the century. Specifically looking at collection programmes, a form of desiderata, this dissertation traces what types of objects and categories of information were understood as shamanic in order to explore how the category circulated and became defined within the ethnographic museums in Siberia and in European Russia. Ph.D. Thesis Yakutsk Siberia University of Toronto: Research Repository T-Space Yakutsk
institution Open Polar
collection University of Toronto: Research Repository T-Space
op_collection_id ftunivtoronto
language unknown
topic Collecting
Ethnography
Imperial Russia
Museums
Shamanism
Siberia
0318
spellingShingle Collecting
Ethnography
Imperial Russia
Museums
Shamanism
Siberia
0318
Franz, Marisa Karyl
A Gathering of Names: On the Categories and Collections of Siberian Shamanic Materials in Late Imperial Russian Museum, 1880-1910
topic_facet Collecting
Ethnography
Imperial Russia
Museums
Shamanism
Siberia
0318
description This dissertation is an intellectual history of the ethnographic naming and systematising of Siberian shamanic materials by collectors for late imperial Russian museums, between approximately 1880-1910. The late imperial era was a time of social and political change in the Russian Empire, during which there was a dramatic increase in the number of local Siberian museums founded. This project approaches Siberia and the local Siberian museums within the context of late imperial Russian scientific modernity to argue that these museums were constructing a new local Siberian intellectual and scientific network of researchers who were defining shamanism through their collections. This project focuses on collectors and the museum communities in the cities of Yakutsk, Irkutsk, and St. Petersburg. It approaches these sites as increasingly interconnected through the academic and personal networks and infrastructural developments that brought increasing numbers of people, willingly and unwillingly, to Siberia at the turn of the century. Specifically looking at collection programmes, a form of desiderata, this dissertation traces what types of objects and categories of information were understood as shamanic in order to explore how the category circulated and became defined within the ethnographic museums in Siberia and in European Russia. Ph.D.
author2 Klassen, Pamela
Religion, Study of
format Thesis
author Franz, Marisa Karyl
author_facet Franz, Marisa Karyl
author_sort Franz, Marisa Karyl
title A Gathering of Names: On the Categories and Collections of Siberian Shamanic Materials in Late Imperial Russian Museum, 1880-1910
title_short A Gathering of Names: On the Categories and Collections of Siberian Shamanic Materials in Late Imperial Russian Museum, 1880-1910
title_full A Gathering of Names: On the Categories and Collections of Siberian Shamanic Materials in Late Imperial Russian Museum, 1880-1910
title_fullStr A Gathering of Names: On the Categories and Collections of Siberian Shamanic Materials in Late Imperial Russian Museum, 1880-1910
title_full_unstemmed A Gathering of Names: On the Categories and Collections of Siberian Shamanic Materials in Late Imperial Russian Museum, 1880-1910
title_sort gathering of names: on the categories and collections of siberian shamanic materials in late imperial russian museum, 1880-1910
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/97429
geographic Yakutsk
geographic_facet Yakutsk
genre Yakutsk
Siberia
genre_facet Yakutsk
Siberia
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1807/97429
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