Critical Companions Series: Objects of Science and Culture episode artwork

EPISODE · Oct 21, 2020 · 42 MIN

Critical Companions Series: Objects of Science and Culture

from The SEI Podcast Series

The Critical Companions Series celebrates innovative and rich thinking. The series aims to traverse disciplinary silos to provoke different perspectives and invite new conversations. Ethnographic museums across Europe are full of objects with a troubled past. The interests of early collectors rarely extended to detailed provenance and the often-colonial context of early collecting left such material tainted by unpalatable histories, not easily rescued even by the new taxonomy of ‘world culture’. But these collections have lives beyond their historic problems. As archives of shell, fibre, hair, tendon, feather, leather and wood, they also offer environmental snapshots of the place and time of their origin, some more than a century old. Through a case study of an Australian shell ornament held in Stockholm’s National Ethnographic Museum, Christine Hansen's project explores the opportunity to reconceive such collections as baseline environmental data. Reconfiguring ethnographic collections as both scientific and cultural not only invites western biodiversity scientists into museum storehouses, it shines a light on non-western knowledge systems in communities of origin, born of deep ties to more-than-human life-worlds. In this exchange, new environmental understandings are advanced and new relevance is given to objects stranded in European collections. For more information about this event click here.Timestamps 00:00 Introduction and Welcome to Country - Rebecca Lawrence 01:20 Objects of Science and Culture - Christine Hansen 33:55 Recognising Swedish Colonialism and Historic Trauma Speakers Christine Hansen, historian and curator, QVMAG Tasmania Rebecca Lawrence (Chair), Senior Research Fellow, Sydney Environment Institute Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Critical Companions Series celebrates innovative and rich thinking. The series aims to traverse disciplinary silos to provoke different perspectives and invite new conversations. Ethnographic museums across Europe are full of objects with a troubled past. The interests of early collectors rarely extended to detailed provenance and the often-colonial context of early collecting left such material tainted by unpalatable histories, not easily rescued even by the new taxonomy of ‘world culture’. But these collections have lives beyond their historic problems. As archives of shell, fibre, hair, tendon, feather, leather and wood, they also offer environmental snapshots of the place and time of their origin, some more than a century old. Through a case study of an Australian shell ornament held in Stockholm’s National Ethnographic Museum, Christine Hansen's project explores the opportunity to reconceive such collections as baseline environmental data. Reconfiguring ethnographic collections as both scientific and cultural not only invites western biodiversity scientists into museum storehouses, it shines a light on non-western knowledge systems in communities of origin, born of deep ties to more-than-human life-worlds. In this exchange, new environmental understandings are advanced and new relevance is given to objects stranded in European collections. For more information about this event click here.Timestamps 00:00 Introduction and Welcome to Country - Rebecca Lawrence 01:20 Objects of Science and Culture - Christine Hansen 33:55 Recognising Swedish Colonialism and Historic Trauma Speakers Christine Hansen, historian and curator, QVMAG Tasmania Rebecca Lawrence (Chair), Senior Research Fellow, Sydney Environment Institute Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

NOW PLAYING

Critical Companions Series: Objects of Science and Culture

0:00 42:28

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of The SEI Podcast Series?

This episode is 42 minutes long.

When was this The SEI Podcast Series episode published?

This episode was published on October 21, 2020.

What is this episode about?

The Critical Companions Series celebrates innovative and rich thinking. The series aims to traverse disciplinary silos to provoke different perspectives and invite new conversations. Ethnographic museums across Europe are full of objects with a...

Can I download this The SEI Podcast Series episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!