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Sociology DTK April 12th 2016 final polished edit.pdf (544.35 kB)

Feeling and being at the (postcolonial) museum: presencing the affective politics of ‘race’ and culture

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journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-09, 13:16 authored by Divya Tolia-KellyDivya Tolia-Kelly
This article posits the value in considering the affective politics in the everyday space of the British Museum with a postcolonial lens. Based on research collaborations with artist Rosanna Raymond the article argues that the gallery space becomes a theatre of pain. The museum acts as a site of materialising the pain of epistemic violence, the rupture of genocide and the deadening of artefacts. The article examines the embodied experience of encountering these galleries as for Maori visitors, the art museum becomes a mausoleum for the European eye, but which petrifies living cultures. In particular the article considers the petrification as it operates along racial lines. The museum space from critical postcolonial perspectives is presenced through Maori bodies looking at ‘self’, as ‘other’. This approach seeks to disturb the ways in which museums are read as texts, disembodied and removed from communities which are represented therein. The article argues for heritage sites as being forged through affective politics, and that race and postcolonial sensibilities resonate within their affective atmospheres.

History

Publication status

  • Published

File Version

  • Accepted version

Journal

Sociology

ISSN

0038-0385

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Issue

5

Volume

50

Page range

896-912

Department affiliated with

  • Geography Publications

Full text available

  • Yes

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes

Legacy Posted Date

2018-05-15

First Open Access (FOA) Date

2018-05-15

First Compliant Deposit (FCD) Date

2018-05-14

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