No Museum is an Island: Ethnography beyond Methodological Containerism

Authors

  • Sharon Macdonald Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin University of York http://orcid.org/0000-0001-5941-4388
  • Christine Gerbich Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
  • Margareta von Oswald Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v16i2.2788

Keywords:

ethnography, museum, methodology, organization, organigram, Berlin

Abstract

This article addresses the question of how to go beyond the conceptualisation of museums as islands in museum ethnography without losing the ethnographic depth and insights that such research can provide. Discussing existing ethnographic research in museums, the ethnographic turn in organization studies, and methodological innovation that seeks to go beyond bounded locations in anthropology, we offer a new museum methodology that retains ethnography’s capacity to grasp the often overlooked workings of organizational life – such as the informal relations, uncodified activities, chance events and feelings – while also avoiding ‘methodological containerism’, that is, the taking of the museum as an organization for granted. We then present a project design for a multi-sited, multi-linked, multi-researcher ethnography to respond to this; together with its specific realisation as the Making Differences project currently underway on Berlin’s Museum Island. Drawing on three sub-projects of this large ethnography – concerned with exhibition-making in the Museum of Islamic Art, in the Ethnological Museum in preparation for the Humboldt Forum (a high profile and contested cultural development due to open in 2019) and a new exhibition about Berlin, also for the Humboldt Forum – we highlight the importance of what happens beyond the ‘container,’ the discretion of what we even take to be the ‘container’, and how ‘organization-ness’ of various kinds is ‘done’ or ‘achieved’. We do this in part through an analysis of organigrams at play in our research fields, showing what these variously reveal, hide and suggest. Understanding museums, and organizations more generally, in this way, we argue, brings insight both to some of the specific developments that we are analysing as well as to museum and organization studies more widely.

Author Biographies

Sharon Macdonald, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin University of York

Sharon Macdonald is Alexander von Humboldt Professor of Social Anthropology in the Institute of European Ethnology, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin and Anniversary Professor of Cultural Anthropology at the University of York. In Berlin, she established and directs CARMAH, the Centre for Anthropological Research on Museums and Heritage. This includes the research project Making Differences in Berlin. Transforming Museums and Heritage in the 21stCentury, which is funded primarily by the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation. She also leads the Contentious Collections work-package of the Horizon 2020 TRACES (Transmitting Contentious Cultural Heritage with the Arts) project, and the Profusion theme of the AHRC Heritage Futures project. Her authored books include Behind the Scenes at the Science Museum (2002),Difficult Heritage (2009) and Memorylands (2013).

Christine Gerbich, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

Christine Gerbich is a researcher at the Centre for Anthropological Research on Museums and Heritage (CARMAH), Berlin. She studied sociology, German philology and Media Studies in Berlin and Bloomington, Indiana. She has worked on several national and international research projects in the field of evaluation, including The Museum Laboratory. On Curating Islamic Arts and Cultural Histories between 2009 and 2013. Her PhD project is an ethnography of the futurability of the Museum of Islamic Art in Berlin where she was involved in two projects: an interdisciplinary research project to develop the exhibition The Heritage of the Old Kings. Ctesiphon and the Persian Sources of Islamic Art and TAMAM – a collaborative project with Muslim communities. Her research interests include the interactions between museums and civic society, collaborative learning, visitor research methodologies, decolonizing practices and future-making.

Margareta von Oswald, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

Margareta von Oswald is a researcher at the Centre for Anthropological Research on Museums and Heritage (CARMAH), Berlin. She studied anthropology and social sciences in Bordeaux, Stuttgart and Paris. For her PhD-project (École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales Paris; Humboldt Universität zu Berlin), she analyses the ‘making of’ of the future permanent exhibitions for Berlin’s Humboldt Forum, and Tervuren’s Royal Museum of Central Africa, that she contributed to and observed from 2013-2015. In 2015, she co-curated the exhibition Object Biographieswith Verena Rodatus (Humboldt Lab Dahlem). Her research interests include the negotiations of colonial pasts in the present, museum ethnographies, curatorship, and collections acquired on the African continent.

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Published

30.07.2018

How to Cite

Macdonald, S., Gerbich, C., & von Oswald, M. (2018). No Museum is an Island: Ethnography beyond Methodological Containerism. Museum & Society, 16(2), 138–156. https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v16i2.2788