MUSEUM FATIGUE

MUSEUM FATIGUE

Main menu

Skip to content
  • About Museum Fatigue
  • Mystery Objects
  • Mythologies
  • About me

Tag: Religion

Show Grid Show List

Post navigation

Why I Love the Gideon Bible People

September 22, 2014 by Museum Fatigue

Every school year begins with the anxiety of meeting new people, starting new classes and getting into the rhythms of higher education. For nearly as long as I have worked at our school it has also been the time of the return of the Gideons. During the first few weeks of school, before the weather gets too chilly, a few of them usually visit campus for a few hours in late morning to mid afternoon. They stand on the sidewalks […]

Categories: Bodies, Objects of Power, Space • Tags: belief, freedom of speech, Gideon Bible, public space, Religion

2

God(zilla) Will Destroy L.A.

January 10, 2013 by Museum Fatigue

Just a few days after the New Year, while in Los Angeles, we visited Hollywood Boulevard. While I don’t imagine the beautiful people do a lot of hanging around in that particular neighborhood, it is sacred ground for the global mythology of Hollywood. Visiting the “walk of fame” is, after all, what tourists are expected to do when they visit L.A. So we went to see the stars—more specifically the traces they have left behind—their handprints and their footprints and the concrete […]

Categories: End of Times, Movies, Mythologies, Random Reflections, Tourism, Video clips • Tags: Fundamentalism, hollywood, Religion

Leave a comment

An Apple is an Apple, Except When It’s a Sign of Satan

November 12, 2012 by Museum Fatigue

As an anthropology professor who regularly teaches classes dealing with material culture and issues of representation, every semester we discuss the ways that humans ascribe meanings to objects—reading them in the terms of the preexisting cultural categories they bring with them. In the context of museums Eilean Hooper-Greenhill (2000) describes these groups as “interpretive communities.” I like this phrase because it foregrounds the fact that interpretation is never entirely individual—but is informed by sociocultural context. It also emphasizes that there is never […]

Categories: Discipline, Everyday Things, iPad, Mythologies • Tags: Apple Computer, Fundamentalism, Religion, satan, technology

Leave a comment

Post navigation

Recent Posts

  • 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
  • A Different Sense of Space in Mineclass

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
  • Follow Following
    • MUSEUM FATIGUE
    • Join 182 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • MUSEUM FATIGUE
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...