The Poetics and Politics of Ivory Collecting and Display at the Milwaukee Public Museum

The museum paradigm shift, first identified by Weil (1990), is evident in the transformations of the poetics and politics of ivory collecting and display over the past 25 years. Based upon Igor Kopytoff's (1986) "biographical" approach to material culture, this thesis demonstrates how...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Murphy, Arianna Wheaton
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: UWM Digital Commons 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dc.uwm.edu/etd/39
https://dc.uwm.edu/context/etd/article/1042/viewcontent/Murphy_uwm_0263m_10070.pdf
id ftunivwisconmil:oai:dc.uwm.edu:etd-1042
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivwisconmil:oai:dc.uwm.edu:etd-1042 2023-07-02T03:32:46+02:00 The Poetics and Politics of Ivory Collecting and Display at the Milwaukee Public Museum Murphy, Arianna Wheaton 2012-12-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://dc.uwm.edu/etd/39 https://dc.uwm.edu/context/etd/article/1042/viewcontent/Murphy_uwm_0263m_10070.pdf unknown UWM Digital Commons https://dc.uwm.edu/etd/39 https://dc.uwm.edu/context/etd/article/1042/viewcontent/Murphy_uwm_0263m_10070.pdf Theses and Dissertations Elephant Ivory Material Culture Studies Museum Studies Political Ecology Walrus Social and Cultural Anthropology text 2012 ftunivwisconmil 2023-06-13T18:28:15Z The museum paradigm shift, first identified by Weil (1990), is evident in the transformations of the poetics and politics of ivory collecting and display over the past 25 years. Based upon Igor Kopytoff's (1986) "biographical" approach to material culture, this thesis demonstrates how ivory in museums has accumulated substantial and diverse cultural meaning, priming it for fluctuation according to modern-day culture shifts. Evidence of fluctuations in the social understanding of ivory is based on a new political ecology, which recognizes that a socially constructed nature underpins wildlife conservation efforts and cultural responses to extinction, both biological and cultural. The interpretation of ivory as a symbol of extinction may reflect Western global conservation ideologies. A visitor study (47 respondents) at the Milwaukee Public Museum (MPM) and an online survey of museum professionals (88 respondents), four artifact biographical sketches from the African and Inuit collections, and examples of ivory on permanent exhibit at the MPM are used to demonstrate shifts in museum practice and attitude. This thesis documents the changing meaning of ivory among visitors to the MPM yet finds a limited dialogue of modern interpretation by museum professionals throughout the United States. In the midst of these debates, ivory is one of the principal forms of material culture in the modern construction of nature. Text inuit walrus* University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee: UWM Digital Commons
institution Open Polar
collection University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee: UWM Digital Commons
op_collection_id ftunivwisconmil
language unknown
topic Elephant
Ivory
Material Culture Studies
Museum Studies
Political Ecology
Walrus
Social and Cultural Anthropology
spellingShingle Elephant
Ivory
Material Culture Studies
Museum Studies
Political Ecology
Walrus
Social and Cultural Anthropology
Murphy, Arianna Wheaton
The Poetics and Politics of Ivory Collecting and Display at the Milwaukee Public Museum
topic_facet Elephant
Ivory
Material Culture Studies
Museum Studies
Political Ecology
Walrus
Social and Cultural Anthropology
description The museum paradigm shift, first identified by Weil (1990), is evident in the transformations of the poetics and politics of ivory collecting and display over the past 25 years. Based upon Igor Kopytoff's (1986) "biographical" approach to material culture, this thesis demonstrates how ivory in museums has accumulated substantial and diverse cultural meaning, priming it for fluctuation according to modern-day culture shifts. Evidence of fluctuations in the social understanding of ivory is based on a new political ecology, which recognizes that a socially constructed nature underpins wildlife conservation efforts and cultural responses to extinction, both biological and cultural. The interpretation of ivory as a symbol of extinction may reflect Western global conservation ideologies. A visitor study (47 respondents) at the Milwaukee Public Museum (MPM) and an online survey of museum professionals (88 respondents), four artifact biographical sketches from the African and Inuit collections, and examples of ivory on permanent exhibit at the MPM are used to demonstrate shifts in museum practice and attitude. This thesis documents the changing meaning of ivory among visitors to the MPM yet finds a limited dialogue of modern interpretation by museum professionals throughout the United States. In the midst of these debates, ivory is one of the principal forms of material culture in the modern construction of nature.
format Text
author Murphy, Arianna Wheaton
author_facet Murphy, Arianna Wheaton
author_sort Murphy, Arianna Wheaton
title The Poetics and Politics of Ivory Collecting and Display at the Milwaukee Public Museum
title_short The Poetics and Politics of Ivory Collecting and Display at the Milwaukee Public Museum
title_full The Poetics and Politics of Ivory Collecting and Display at the Milwaukee Public Museum
title_fullStr The Poetics and Politics of Ivory Collecting and Display at the Milwaukee Public Museum
title_full_unstemmed The Poetics and Politics of Ivory Collecting and Display at the Milwaukee Public Museum
title_sort poetics and politics of ivory collecting and display at the milwaukee public museum
publisher UWM Digital Commons
publishDate 2012
url https://dc.uwm.edu/etd/39
https://dc.uwm.edu/context/etd/article/1042/viewcontent/Murphy_uwm_0263m_10070.pdf
genre inuit
walrus*
genre_facet inuit
walrus*
op_source Theses and Dissertations
op_relation https://dc.uwm.edu/etd/39
https://dc.uwm.edu/context/etd/article/1042/viewcontent/Murphy_uwm_0263m_10070.pdf
_version_ 1770272446803345408