The Refiguration of Conservation: Introducing the Concept of 'Staging Nature' in the Case of Botanical Gardens

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v22i1.4377

Keywords:

botanical garden, refiguration of space, natureculture conservation, hybrid mapping, conservation regime

Abstract

Botanical garden museums are undergoing profound transformations. At the beginning of the 21st century refiguring processes, including climate change, the imperative of decolonisation, and advances in digital technology have led to a shift in the positioning of botanical gardens from Humboldtian collectors of nature to protectors of biodiversity. In this paper, through the sociospatial investigation of Berlin’s Botanical Garden and Museum, we analysed the ordering logics underpinning the staging of nature within the glasshouses - caught between permanence and change. Pursuing this investigation on a double analytical level, we analysed how the Berlin botanical garden is adapting to, or indeed struggling with a shifting conservation mission; and secondly, what are the consequences for the destabilisation of the conservation regime’s modernist underpinnings. We conclude the paper by speculating about the necessity of a nature-culture conservation regime. 

Author Biographies

Jamie Scott Baxter, Technische Universität Berlin

Jamie-Scott Baxter (Dr.-Ing) is an architect-planner and coordinates the “Planetary Workshop" - a transdisciplinary “living lab" within the BUA project "Re-Scaling Global Health. Human Health and Multispecies Cohabitation on an Urban Planet" at the Technische Universität Berlin. In this constellation, he coordinates the sub-project "Biophilic Urbanisms: Contestations in the Spread and Planning of UrbanNatures". He works at the intersection of design and science, engaging multispecies and hybrid mapping, topologies and multisited ethnographies. Interests include, infrastructures, circulation of knowledge, periphery-centre relations, and critical spatial theory. Jamie is joint executive editor at Architecture and Culture.

Séverine Marguin, Technische Universität Berlin

Séverine Marguin, (Dr.) sociologist, is Head of the Methods-Lab and of the Graduate School within the CRC 1265 “Re-Figuration of Spaces” at Technische Universität Berlin. Aside from her habilitation on the relationship between sociology and design, she leads two research projects: "Afronovelas: Spatial Stories and Production Regime in West-African Soaps" at the TU Berlin and "Museum Knowledge Space" in collaboration with the HU Berlin. Her interdisciplinary research focus lies on culture and knowledge production, sociology of space, experimental and design-based methods. Séverine is joint executive editor at Architecture and Culture.

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Published

24.04.2024

How to Cite

Baxter, J. S., & Marguin, S. (2024). The Refiguration of Conservation: Introducing the Concept of ’Staging Nature’ in the Case of Botanical Gardens. Museum & Society, 22(1), 14–33. https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v22i1.4377

Issue

Section

Museums Refigured