MUSEUM FATIGUE

MUSEUM FATIGUE

Main menu

Skip to content
  • About Museum Fatigue
  • Mystery Objects
  • Mythologies
  • About me
Show Grid Show List

Experiences All The Way Down

February 24, 2020 by Museum Fatigue

Just before nine o’clock last evening, I received an email notification that I book I ordered from Amazon had been delivered to a shipment locker not so far from my home. In what I hope was a self-referential joke on the nature of capital, its name was “Vlad” no less! Since I had just finished my most recent book and was looking forward to adding the new arrival to the pile next to my favorite chair, I decided to head […]

Categories: Consumption, Uncategorized • Tags: Amazon, experiences

Leave a comment

And a Drone Shall Be the Sign

February 22, 2020 by Museum Fatigue

A few weeks back when the COVID-19 Coronavirus really hit the news, I was fascinated to see an outbreak in the news of drone stories coming from China. Over the past few years the drone has become a kind of, pardon the pun, a floating signifier for all that is rational, automated and “unmanned” about modernity in China. Never mind that drones loaded with disinfectant chemicals flying around “fighting the Coronavirus” are of limited value and probably not too good for […]

Categories: Surveillance • Tags: Coronavirus, COVID-19, drones

Leave a comment

Coal Burning and Climate Article from 108 Years Ago

February 22, 2020 by Museum Fatigue

I’ve had this image of a news article from 1912 floating around my computer for some time now, and really need to stick it somewhere for safe keeping. Posting it here should keep it somewhere where I can always find it! The article, from Wednesday, August 14th, 1912 issue of The Rodney & Otamatea Times, Waitemata & Kaipara Gazette in New Zealand, is titled: “Coal Consumption Affecting Climate” and reads: GOAL CONSUMPTION AFFECTING CLIMATE. The furnaces of the world are now burning […]

Categories: Anthropocene, Climate Crisis • Tags: CO2, coal

Leave a comment

Mystery Object #28: Imperial Examination Cheat Sheet Socks

February 3, 2020 by Museum Fatigue

Late last week while going through some of my photos for a talk on China, I came upon some images I took while visiting the Jiangnan Imperial Examination Museum in Nanjing (江南贡院) a few of years back—part of a small case displaying elaborate attempts at cheating on the imperial examinations. The photos were of some knee-high leggings completely covered with neatly hand-written characters—including the soles of the feet! I was very impressed at the detail, the care and the attention […]

Categories: Mystery Objects • Tags: cheat sheet, cheating, China, imperial examination, jiangnangongyuan

2

Pokémon, Yokai, Animism, Anthropocene

January 20, 2020 by Museum Fatigue

This morning my son sat down and asked me to read through his Pokémon cards with him. Of course I’ve heard of Pokémon, and I remember the Pokémon Go mobile game craze back in the summer of 2016. But, until this morning I really had no first-hand experience with the game and the variety of Pokémon creatures. There were such a great variety of beasts and forces inhabiting all aspects of the planet—woods, waters, earth and sky, thunder, lightning, fire, […]

Categories: Anthropocene • Tags: animism, Pokémon, yokai

Leave a comment

The Living Life in Real Human Spheres

January 15, 2020 by Museum Fatigue

In the final three chapters of Peter Sloterdijk’s In the World Interior of Capital, he discusses the “spatial revolution of the present,” the idea of the local and its asymmetrical relationship to the global. Finally he concludes with the components necessary to “living in real human spheres.” Sloterdijk begins with the observation that the technologies of the global interior have seemed to make space an “ignorable factor”—compressing space to the point that it really seems to make no difference. In this […]

Categories: Reading Notes • Tags: In the World Interior of Capital, local, Peter Sloterdijk

Leave a comment

Exploding Machines

January 13, 2020 by Museum Fatigue

What is the history of the politics of pampering? If the universal agent of pampering is petroleum (214) as Sloterdijk asserts, then it follows that the material politics of energy might be a foundation for this history.” Sloterdijk suggests exactly this: “…it can be argued that all narratives about the changes in the human condition are narratives about the changing exploitation of energy sources–or descriptions of metabolic regimes” (224). From this perspective, the industrial revolution is not just about making […]

Categories: Reading Notes • Tags: engines, In the World Interior of Capital, motors, pampering space, Peter Sloterdijk

The Pampering Hothouse

January 12, 2020 by Museum Fatigue

In his chapter, “Mutations in the Pampering Space,” Sloterdijk finally gets to describing aspects of the comfort space of the great interior of the palace—the boredom of the hothouse existence on the inside. I like his idea of a “pampering space” because it suggests the hyper-abundance of material goods and security in the overdeveloped interior. Sloterdijk begins by observing that for the populations within the “comfort sphere” there is a shift from need and lack to “thinking in options.” While […]

Categories: Reading Notes • Tags: In the World Interior of Capital, pampering space, Peter Sloterdijk, The Crystal Palace

Leave a comment

Boredom and Fascination of the Crystal Palace’s Inhabitants

January 10, 2020 by Museum Fatigue

In his usage of the Crystal Palace as metaphor for the ordered interior space of the modern project, Sloterdijk describes the inhabitants as afflicted by a “palace boredom” (180). This boredom makes the inhabitants’ pine for “news from the outside” thus threats are experienced as a stimulant. This waiting for news makes their media nervous systems easy to invade through, for example, the violent acts of terrorism. In the dense contexts of encounters in urban and global communication networks, there […]

Categories: Reading Notes • Tags: In the World Interior of Capital, Peter Sloterdijk, The Crystal Palace

Leave a comment

Peter Sloterdijk’s Crystal Palace Metaphor

January 9, 2020 by Museum Fatigue

This morning I arrived at the heart of Sloterdijk’s book, In the World Interior of Capital, the chapter “The Crystal Palace.” That he examines the Crystal Palace of 1851 as a metaphor for modernity is not new—certainly not among anthropologists and folks in visual culture and museum studies who look to the practices of imperial and capitalist-market visuality that the palace represents. The palace’s grand promise to categorize the world and its geographical commodities of empire is obvious—as is its historical position […]

Categories: Reading Notes • Tags: In the World Interior of Capital, Peter Sloterdijk, The Crystal Palace

Leave a comment

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Recent Posts

  • Wong Cafe Menus, Saint Paul, Minnesota
  • F*ck E-Learning. Snow Days Teach Us Something More Important.
  • Why Don’t Minnesotans Have a Word For This Thing That Gives Us So Much Joy?
  • Breakout Discussion Groups in Minecraft
  • Student Feedback on Digital Anthropology Class in Three Modalities: Zoom, Minecraft and (Pandemic) In-person

Category Cloud

Anthropology Assignments Bodies Books China Consumption COVID Spring Education End of Times Fieldwork Food Higher Education How To Museums Mystery Objects Mythologies Nostalgia Objects of Power Photo Essays Politics Random Reflections Representation Scripts Surveillance Teaching Tourism Uncategorized Video clips Visual Anthropology Visual Anthropology Class

Archives

Blogroll

  • Anthrodendum
  • China Digital Times
  • Cyborgology
  • io9
  • Living Anthropologically
  • Museum Anthropology
  • Old Dirt, New Thoughts
  • The Ludologist
  • This Sociological Life

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Create a website or blog at WordPress.com
MUSEUM FATIGUE
Create a website or blog at WordPress.com
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • MUSEUM FATIGUE
    • Join 191 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • MUSEUM FATIGUE
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...