The ethics of collecting trauma : the role of museums in collecting and displaying contemporary crises / edited by Alexandra Bounia, Andrea Witcomb. - Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2024. - 1 online resource

Why a book on the ethics of collecting contemporary trauma is needed / Andrea Witcomb and Alexandra Bounia -- The crisis that binds us : The ethics of collecting trauma in 'catastrophic times' / Jennifer Carter -- A Future for Memory : Resurgence of culture-nature in the aftermath of 3.11 / Fuyubi Nakamura -- Mapping memorialisation of pandemic experiences : Care, stewardship and guardianship / Laia Colomer and Edwin Schmitt -- Towards a higher standard : Museums, communities of trauma, and the public trust / James B. Gardner -- Poetics, politics and ethics of collecting : Two Brazillian cases / Claudia Porto and Mario de Souza Ghagas -- Engaging with colonial collecting practices today : Practising 'epistemic disobedience' / Andrea Witcomb -- Ethically contested exhumations in Eastern Zimbabwe : a compromise between spiritual approaches and scientific practices / Njabulo Chipangura -- Silence and Remembering : Locating the Cultural Trauma of Terrorism in London's Museums, Archives and Memorials / Rhiannon Mason -- Ethics of care in collecting spontaneous memorials / Kostas Arvanitis -- Collecting (forced) migration : the ethics of collecting 'neglected things' / Alexandra Bounia.

"The Ethics of Collecting Trauma offers an interdisciplinary dialogue on the ethics of contemporary museums that are involved in collecting moments of collective trauma. Including a range of international contributions, the volume explores the ethics of collecing material that documents contemporary traumaic events. The case studies focus on four categories of such events: forced migration; terrorism attacks; major natural disasters; and cultural traumas, such as the ongoing legacy of colonization. Contributors consider whether cultural institutions have a right to collect materials about these events and what kind of materials they should focus on, if so; who is being memorialized, who should hold the power to decide what is collected, and what the critical timeline for such initiatives is. The volume also considers what the larger purpose of such collecting is and how to deal with past collecting practices, arguing that museums need to consider, in a careful and deliberate way, their ethical responsibilities as cultural institutions. The Ethics of Collecting Trauma will be of interest to academics and students working in the areas of museum and heritage studies, cultural studies, trauma studies, memory studies, and migration studies. The book will also appeal to museum professionals working around the globe"--

9781003139485 1003139485 9781040149539 1040149537 9781040149584 1040149588

10.4324/9781003139485 doi


Museums--Acquisitions--Moral and ethical aspects.
Museums--Collection management--Moral and ethical aspects.
Psychic trauma.
Memorialization.
PHILOSOPHY / Ethics & Moral Philosophy

174/.90694