Member Reviews
Ironic, isn't it, that not long after finishing the book and taking a break on a social media site that almost the first post that popped up was one about a virtual tour of Auschwitz being offered by the Holocaust Education Center. In addition, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum posts regularly on social media, informing and, among other things, sharing photos of those whose lives were lost of changed forever by the Nazis. Far from being hidden away behind closed doors that often require an admission fee to enter, museums are visible and serving a variety of purposes today. Redman's book is a look at how they got to this point. How they have preserved and, yes, improved history.
Whether your small, local museum dedicated perhaps to local concerns or the vast Smithsonian or Louvre, all have had to adapt and learn not just from past events but current ones. It's a cliche but change is inevitable but museums have had to change frequently. Financial problems seem chronic, as do cutbacks in staff and acquisitions. Fire and natural disasters have destroyed and threatened priceless exhibits. Yet, museums persist. Whereas Redman details historical events and their impact on museums, one of the ideas was that the idea of a museums, in whatever format, is that they are durable. Wars and events such as, yes, pandemics, as well as changing attitudes and cultures have also played a role.
Quite frankly, even as a former history major, I also had no idea of the role many museums and their staffs played during the wars. For instance, they contributed not just their knowledge but linguistic skills. They shared how to preserve things, make them last. Yet, they haven't just preserved history and artifacts but shared them with the world at large. The goal of most seems to not just exist but to make a definite contribution to the community and world about them.
Bottom line, Redman does a commendable job presenting not just the history of the museum as an idea but his take on where the museum needs to go in the future. As a former history major and teacher, I was fascinated to discover how involved in the world events about them museums were, whether responding to the Great Depression and world wars to dealing with changing times and needs. That I can so readily encounter museum funded virtual videos on not just the Holocaust but almost any event that has taken place shows how quick man is to preserve. Museums serve a valuable purpose. Yes, the idea of the museum is durable.
Thank you #NetGalley and #NYUPress for the advance copy. I learned a great deal.
The Museum by Samuel J. Redman is a nonfiction book about the many different crisis and upheavals that museums have faced throughout the history of the United States. As someone who has both studied and worked in the Museum field I appreciated the exploration of the many different crisis and issues museums have faced overtime. I also like that fact that the author tried to see what exactly happen and how that instance is viewed now with the advantage of hindsight. However, as the book discussed more recent issues I did feel like the author's personal feelings came out more than was necessary.
THE MUSEUM offers everything that I look for in a history book that I read for fun: engaging, smart, short, and well-researched. THE MUSEUM traces the history of museums confronting crises in the modern U.S.: WWI, Great Depression, WWII, 1970s protests, 1980s-1990s history wars, contemporary issues. book carefully balances (1) museums themselves, (2) the history of museums, (3) how the historical context throughout the history of museums shaped the museums themselves.
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some favorite lines from the conclusion: “museums are not invincible” and “museums are not perfect.” combined with the last chapter’s reference to the “museums are not neutral” movement, readers arrive at: museums are not invincible, museums are not perfect, museums are not neutral.
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I enjoyed the whole book from New Deal funding for museum projects to WWII collaboration with State Dept to blazing culture wars of the past half-century. author consciously mentions that this is a short not cumulative history: it emphasizes famous, sizable, American museums, though broader trends apply to smaller ones, too. sources include institutional records and newspapers.
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THE MUSEUM should be popular among public history graduate students, public historians ‘in the field,’ and museum visitors seeking a history of museums adjusting to change and shaping history.
Samuel J. Redman's THE MUSEUM is an extensive and exhaustive brief history of American museology during the 20th and 21st centuries. As someone who is currently working inside a public museum, it is incredibly fascinating to see how much and how little things have changed in 100 years: the way two World Wars, devastating fires, economic crashes, and two pandemics shaped the way museums work nowadays is incredibly compelling, and Redman's writing (while a bit pedantic at times) is rather easy to read. A book that is well worth reading if you have ever wanted to know more about just how complicated running a museum can be, and how important it is to adapt to the changing of times.
A much needed and timely book, Redman effortless focuses on a succinct but comprehensive timeline of crises that museums have faced in their history. Working beyond obvious natural disasters, I appreciated comments on social, economic, and even health crises that have tested and shaped institutions - and continue to shape them today.
This book is not only a must read for museum professionals, particularly those future leaders who are still early in their career, but also serves as critical reading for any Museum Studies program.
I look forward to reading more of Redman’s work.
Redman, whose previous excellent books analyzed museum bone rooms, and the approach of "salvage culture" to anthropological study and collections, offers a brief but thought provoking set of case studies of American museums in crisis situations, and how their choices have changed the trajectory of the institutions. From the 1918 flu, the Great Depression, WWII, the museum protest strikes of the 1970s, the Enola Gay culture wars, 9/11, the 2008 financial crisis to the current Covid closures, major public fixtures face laying off staff, deaccessioning valuable pieces and even permanent closure. Some have taken dramatic pivots--using WPA monies and workforce to reorganize and catalog collections for more accessibility, promoting the value of their items as models for technical innovation (as the navy called on Inuit arctic boats and cold-weather gear for inspiration) and their experts for cultural knowledge used by the government, responding to protests about that help used during the Cold War as soft power by the CIA, collecting contemporary art and reframing existing exhibits to reflect changing social norms and building or evolving relationships with ancestor or creator communities, sending back human remains under the NAGPRA, planning for terrorist attacks and severe storms from climate change (as in hurricanes Sandy and Katrina), making their galleries and their jobs more accessible to marginalized communities, and scrambling to keep the lights on during Covid (my favorite, of course, is the penguin field trip). Redman is ideally placed to offer sensitive commentary on the ways in which powerful institutions can and need to bend to survive, and their obligation to be a meaningful part of the social world where they sit.
Short history of incidents that museums had to overcome to protect art. I found this book to be incredibly interesting. My only feedback was is that it’s completely devoid of all pictures. I don’t think any books on our evening history book should not have any pictures of the art.