Work, specimen, witness: How different perspectives on museum objects alter the way they are perceived and the values attributed to them

Authors

  • Thomas Thiemeyer Ludwig-Uhland-Institut für Empirische Kulturwissenschaft Burgsteige 11 72070 Tübingen

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v13i3.338

Abstract

The generic term ‘museum objects’ suggests that a uniform category is involved. But museums in various disciplines have exhibited objects according to quite different rules and have assigned values to them that depend on the standards of the field of inquiry concerned: aesthetic quality, value as a historical source, as a relic or as a representative item. Over time, various display conventions have become established, which appear to us today to be natural and that assign the objects to specific stimulus values. The aim of this essay is to achieve a better understanding of these exhibition practices and discipline-specific value standards. The study aims to discover why we have become accustomed to using objects in exhibitions in different ways, and it distinguishes between three types of object: work, specimen and witness. The hypothesis here is that each of these follows its own display conventions, forms of perception and standards of value. The present essay aims to situate these three types of object – work, specimen and witness – historically and in this way to articulate the differences in status that exist between them.

Author Biography

Thomas Thiemeyer, Ludwig-Uhland-Institut für Empirische Kulturwissenschaft Burgsteige 11 72070 Tübingen

Thomas Thiemeyer is an assistant professor of Empirische Kulturwissenschaft at the University
of Tübingen, where he received his Ph.D. in 2009. His dissertation was published as Fortsetzung
des Krieges mit anderen Mitteln. Die beiden Weltkriege im Museum (Schöningh, 2010). After
receiving an M.A. from the University of Bamberg in modern history in 2003, he held a position
in the team which developed the Mercedes-Benz Museum in Stuttgart. From 2009 to 2012
he was the coordinator of the research project wissen&museum: (www.wissen-und-museum.
de). His research interests include museum and archive studies, cultures of memory, material
culture, cultural theory, and the communication of scientific research.

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Published

01.07.2015

How to Cite

Thiemeyer, T. (2015). Work, specimen, witness: How different perspectives on museum objects alter the way they are perceived and the values attributed to them. Museum & Society, 13(3), 396–412. https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v13i3.338

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Articles