Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £13.89 GBP
Regular price £17.00 GBP Sale price £13.89 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 6 days lead

Egyptian Archaeology and the Twenty-First Century Museum

Critically addresses how museum collections from and representations of 'ancient Egypt' have profoundly shaped and shape archaeological understandings of Egypt.

Alice Stevenson (Author)

9781009074377, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 8 September 2022

75 pages
22.8 x 15.1 x 0.6 cm, 0.16 kg

This Element addresses the cultural production of ancient Egypt in the museum as a mixture of multiple pasts and presents that cohere around collections; their artefacts, documentation, storage, research, and display. Its four sections examine how ideas about the past are formed by museum assemblages: how their histories of acquisition and documentation shape interpretation, the range of materials that comprise them, the influence of their geographical framing, and the moments of remaking that might be possible. Throughout, the importance of critical approaches to interpretation is underscored, reasserting the museum as a site of active research and experiment, rather than only exhibitionary product or communicative media. It argues for a multi-directional approach to museum work that seeks to reveal the inter-relations of collection histories and which has implications not just for museum representation and documentation, but also for archaeological practice more broadly.

1. Introduction
2. Collecting Histories
3. Materials
4. Space and Place
5. Experimental Re-assembly
6. Concluding Remarks
References.

Subject Areas: Anthropology [JHM], Egyptian archaeology / Egyptology [HDDG], Museology & heritage studies [GM]

View full details