“Deterritorializing the Canadian Museum for Human Rights”

Authors

  • Adam Muller University of Manitoba

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v18i2.2686

Keywords:

Canadian Museum for Human Rights, assemblage, deterritorialization, curation

Abstract

 This article explains the value of assemblage theory to making sense of a museum like the Canadian Museum for Human Rights (CMHR), which has struggled with the formidable challenge of comparatively representing human rights in controversial cultural and historical contexts. I argue that “assemblage thinking” permits us to appreciate more richly the way in which the expressive power of the CMHR arises from the dynamic interaction/intersection of overlapping clusters of objects, spaces, ideologies, memories, feelings, structures, histories, and experiences.  Understood as “assemblages,” these clusters in important (but not all) ways lie beyond the scope of formal agency such as that exercised by curators and museum administrators. Accordingly, we must understand museums generally, and the CMHR particularly, as fundamentally unable guarantee the integrity and perdurability of their/its own structures and meanings, and recognize these meanings (and a museum’s identity) as irreducibly open-ended and provisional.

 

Author Biography

Adam Muller, University of Manitoba

Dr. Adam Muller is the Director of Peace and Conflict Studies at the University of Manitoba, Canada, where he studies the representation of genocide, human rights, and mass violence. He is the editor of Concepts of Culture: Art, Politics, and Society (2005), as well as co-editor of Fighting Words and Images: Representing War Across the Disciplines (2012) and The Idea of a Human Rights Museum(2015). 

 

Dr. Muller has a special interest in photography, and in 2014 curated Photrocity, an exhibition of never-before seen Soviet wartime atrocity photographs. He is the First Vice-President of the International Association of Genocide Scholars, and a Research Associate at the Mauro Centre for Peace and Justice Studies. He is also a Senior Research Fellow with the U of M’s Centre for Defense and Security Studies. 

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Published

04.07.2020

How to Cite

Muller, A. (2020). “Deterritorializing the Canadian Museum for Human Rights”. Museum & Society, 18(2), 82–97. https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v18i2.2686

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Section

Articles