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2020 | 8 | 4 | 23 – 34

Article title

“BONES IN THE SANDBOX”: MUSEUM AS “WORLD PICTURE” VS MUSEUM AS “LIFEWORLD”

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
This article deals with the issues of museum communication and interpretation of museum exhibits in a philosophical and cultural context. As an example, it considers two different ways of presenting palaeontological material – specifically, the skeleton of southern mammoth – revealing differences in how the semantic content is interpreted. The first method – the traditional approach of assembling the skeleton – gives a “world picture” of a certain era, as it appears to a palaeontologist. The second approach presents the skeleton in a “sandbox”, representing how it was found during excavations, such that viewers deal not with the interpreted “ready-made” material, but with the contemporary experienced reality – the “life-world”, the “raw” source material. This allows visitors to realize their own creative potential and to recreate the nature of the Pleistocene epoch in their imagination. Thus, through the mutual correlation of the roles exhibition’s author and of the visitor as an interpreter, the semantic field of museum communication expands. In Heidegger’s conception, “hides the world rather than explains it, while the “life world” represents it as it is.

Year

Volume

8

Issue

4

Pages

23 – 34

Physical description

Contributors

  • North Caucasus Federal University, Institute of Engineering, 1 Pushkin Street, 355009, Stavropol, Russia

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.cejsh-33da7df9-1a61-4c98-831f-d42543a4e4f2
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