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NTRODUCTIONGICANDITUALOCESSESOF Bouquet and Nuno PortoThis was a museu NTRODUCTIONGICANDITUALOCESSESOF Bouquet and Nuno PortoThis was a museu

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NTRODUCTIONGICANDITUALOCESSESOF Bouquet and Nuno PortoThis was a museu - PPT Presentation

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NTRODUCTIONGICANDITUALOCESSESOF Bouquet
NTRODUCTIONGICANDITUALOCESSESOF Bouquet and Nuno PortoThis was a museum of technology, after all. YouÕre in a museum of technology, I toldmyself, an honest place, a little dull perhaps, but the dead here are harmless. You knowwhat museums are, no oneÕs ever been devoured by the Mona Lisa Ð an androgynousdusa only for esthetes Ð and you are even less likely to be devoured by WattÕs engine,a bugbear only for Ossianic and Neo-Gothic gentlemen, a pathetic compromise, really,between function and Corinthian elegance, handle and capital, boiler and column,wheel and tympanum. Jacapo Belbo, though he was far away, was trying to draw meinto the hallucinations that had undone him. You must behave like a scientist, I toldmyself. A vulcanologist does not burn like Empedocles. Frazer did not ßee, hounded,into the wood of Nemi. Come, youÕre supposed to be Sam Spade. (Eco [1989] 2001: 12)This passage from Umberto EcoÕs celebrated novel oucaultÕs Pendulumcaptures succinctly the central theme of this book: how are places such as theConservatoire des Arts et MŽtiers in Paris, one of the key settings of EcoÕsnovel, transformed into ritual sites? How can scientific and technologicalelics, monuments to rationality and Enlightenment thinking, be infected bythe strong enchantment of magical and ritual procedures? A museum of tech-nology is, as Eco puts it, scarcely the venue one would expect for a bizarreritual. Yet, unfolding as it does through time compressed inside the periscopewhere Casaubon stows away after closing time, the plot brings us relentlesslyto the point where we are prepared to suspend our disbelief. The long chainof events leading up to this moment invests the place and its collection withthe fathomless webs of meaning spun by the actors involved in the plot.00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 1This is exactly the point made Ð in a different way Ð by Donald Tuzin inhis analysis of the construction of the Ilahita Arapesh tambaranhouse, venuefor the Nggwal initiation ceremonies in north-eastern Papua New Guinea. ÔIttook me sometime to rid myself of Judeo-Christian preconceptions as to whatbut rather the significance that attaches to it Ð and to realise that the ritualaccording to Nggwal truly began before the men went out to cut the firsttimbersÕ (Tuzin 1980: 122Ð23). Ritual thus generates meaningful action longbefore the event. Concrete social activities, such as the construction of a spirithouse and the flow of yams and pigs between exchange partners, are gearedtowards this future moment but govern life long beforehand.argue that these two instances do not belong to the realms of extrav-agant fiction and exotic ethnography, but suggest new approaches to thecomparative analysis of the museum as a ritual site

and as a ritual process. Letus briefly
and as a ritual process. Letus briefly consider a case closer to home to underline this point. Museums) are repeatedly used as venues for the opening ceremonies ofinternational scientific organisations such as the European Association ofocial Anthropologists (EASA). Visiting Malinowski The reception party for the European Association of Social AnthropologyÕsconference in 2000, ÔCrossing categorical boundaries: Religion as politics/politics as religionÕ, took place in the National Museum of Krakow and wasalinowski Ð Witkacy. Photog-aphy: Between Science and Art. The ceremonial opening of an exhibitiondevoted to one of the key ancestral figures of modern social anthropology,onislaw Malinowski, exemplifies how the museum may be pressed intoservice by and for particular groups.The differing stakes held by museumstaff, conference organisers, EASA members and wider publics in this specificevent in Krakow, reflect a common pattern that can be found in connectionwith museums and related sites the world over. A place, a collection, a build-ing is filled with various meanings and therefore worth visiting as Ð fordifferent reasons Ð an anthropologist, a tourist, or as a Polish or Europeancitizen.alinowki Ð Witkacyexhibition, the European anthro-pologists present were paying homage to one of the founding fathers of thediscipline, in the hometown of the Jagiellonian University. The narrativestructure of the exhibition was built around the friendship betweenalinowski, the scholar, and Witkacy, the artist, combining Malinowskiphotographs from the London School of EconomicsÕ archive collection withpaintings and drawings by Witkacy. etween Science and Art Bouquet and Nuno Porto00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 2metaphor not only for photography, but also for anthropology and for themuseum. The exhibition was dramatised by the convergence of anthropolo-gists from across the world on this town and in the reception hall of thismuseum to be present at the inauguration ceremonies. Participants arrived inKrakow to the accompaniment of a dramatic thunderstorm; the conferencewas inaugurated at the Philharmonic Hall, complete with ritual doorway anda piano recital (Chopin and Paderewski);and followed by the reception andopening at the National Museum. The exhibition opened in the presence ofelena Wayne, MalinowskiÕs daughter. And when everyone had had some-thing to eat and drink, the EASA congregation climbed the stairs to theexhibition entrance and made its way through the dimly lit exhibition halls,looking, exclaiming in small groups and encountering familiar as well as newfaces throughout. A ceremonial visit to an exhibition of this kind obviously concentrates andsolidifies meaning for a group such as this one. Performi

ng this itinerary,conference participant
ng this itinerary,conference participants (re-)encountered one another, while simultaneouslyengaged with one of their own culture heroes summoned up in situ.alinowski became a tangible presence in the exhibition which, by focussingon a relatively unknown relationship, gave further depth and richness toanthropology as the common factor uniting everybody. The invitation to iden-tify oneself as a member of the congregation in the act of collectivelyemembering Malinowski is one that few anthropologists would have diffi-culty with. Malinowski belongs to the past and anthropology has moved on,et the revelation of this new dimension of the founding father of the ethno-graphic method endows his memory with a kind of generative immortality.This was not simply a case of remembering a completed curriculum, but ofopening up a new chapter Ð and one that resonates with some of the innov-ative directions being taken by contemporary anthropology. It is with thisgenerative capacity of the exhibitionary complex that the chapters of thisolume are concerned. ecular rituals, such as this one from EASAÕs history, seem in some senseto fill a void created by the Ôcrossed-out GodÕ of rational, post-Enlightenmentmankind (Latour 1993: 33), conceptualised by Weber in terms of the Ôdis-enchantment of the worldÕ. This book sets out to explore how museums andsimilar sites may be invested with ritual meaningby both museum staff andvisitors. Carol DuncanÕs (1995) seminal work on the art museum as a ritualsite is our point of departure. We aim to extend the scope of ethnographicanalysis beyond the modern western art museum to other kinds of museum(zoo, science museum, former colonial mission) and sites (natural parks,former Nazi rallying grounds), both in Europe and in Africa. In this intro-duction we set out the coordinates that enable us to develop the theoreticalrange of DuncanÕs argument beyond the exhibitionary site as ÔscriptÕ, toexamine the actors taking a hand in museum choreography (in both the longntroduction: Science, Magic and Religion00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 3and short terms); to go beyond DuncanÕs Ôideal visitorÕ, whom she conceivesas performing a rite confirming citizenship, to examine ways in whichmuseum publics actively use the museum for their own performances; and toconsider how their performances dovetail (or fail to) with curatorial agencyin the kinds of encounters that take place between different parties on theritual site. accomplish this, the authors adopt a strictly ethnographic approach thatallows the comparison of exhibitionary situations. Contributors examine waysin which museum collections are constituted and technologically manipulated(Harvey, Wiekzorcewicz, Silva), through the interplay of s

cience and magic;how collections or coll
cience and magic;how collections or collection elementsare actively transformedthrough timeand context (Wastiau); how the constitution of sites may involve both archi-tectural and sculptural elements (Saunders); the way landscape may be turnedinto a museum without walls (Heatherington); or an existing complex bemusealised, reframing its cultural significance by contextual strategy (Fair-eather); or how a site may become implicated in thwarting curatorialintention (Wolbert); and finally, posing dilemmas about the contemporaryenchantment of haunted sites (Macdonald). The actorsÕ share in constitutingthem as visitors, is central to nearly all the chapters. The issue of agency istherefore a central concern: in the processes of constituting artefacts, collec-tions and sites; in officially mediating public meanings accessible throughpersonal guides or technological devices; and in visitorsÕ performances, appro-priation or even rejection of what is on offer. This introduction reviews theforms of agency involved in the constitution, mediation and reception ofcontemporary museums and related sites, proceeding towards a theoreticalformulation of the museum as a ritual site in which longer term processesconverge.Constituting Ritual Substances: the BeholderÕs Share ne of DuncanÕs principal arguments is that although post-Enlightenmentculture dichotomises the categories of secular and religious, Ôour supposedlysecular, even anti-ritual, culture is full of ritual situations and eventsÕ, few ofwhich take place in religious settings (Duncan 1995: 2). She argues that Ôwetoo build sites that publicly represent beliefs about the order of the world, itspast and present, and the individualÕs place within itÕ (uncanÕs analysis of (mainly Anglo-American) public art museums provedinspiring as a framework for understanding contemporary, secular ritual.her focus on these specific sites also circumscribes the explanatoryhorizons of such a model. Our first concern has been to put these limitationsto the test by examining how her insights might be applied to other sorts of Bouquet and Nuno Porto00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 4museum, collections and related sites and also beyond Europe and America.The ethnographic cases under consideration stretch the term museumlimits of its application, dealing with museological apparatuses which, even ifdeveloped beyond the museum walls, may nonetheless be conceptualised aspart of Ômuseum cultureÕ (Sherman and Rogoff 1994). ÔMuseum cultureÕprovides a useful framework for putting DuncanÕs model into perspective.ccording to Sherman and Rogoff, the museum engenders its own specificpractices and representations which they explain through four main concepts.bject, context, public, and recepti

on provide through their interaction a m
on provide through their interaction a means of specifying what the museum is about, beyond the conventionaldefinition of a collection-based place. Such articulation paves the way for con-sidering visitor agency in the process. An urban (context) art (object) general(public) museum Ð such as the Louvre Ð is likely to be experienced by its localarisian ÔregularÕ quite differently than, say, a Japanese visitor on a weekÕs de Francethat includes a Saturday afternoon whistle stop whiz through theLouvre in the two days spent in Paris. In fact, everything is altered by includ-ing reception in the analysis. Although, however, this notion does accord someole to visitor agency in the museum process, it does not in itself address thehowthat agency works on the museum as a ritual site. The contrib-utors to this volume go beyond the museum as an institution to consider theprocesses and underlying rationales whereby different exhibitionary situationsThumbnail Overview of the VolumeThe volume is divided into four sections: Part I concerns key moments in thelife trajectories of two distinctive museum objects Ð a reconstruction of thefirst computer (ÔBabyÕ) at the Museum of Science and Industry (MSI) inanchester (Penelope Harvey), and the unwrapping of Egyptian mummiesin various museums (Anna Wieczorkiewicz). In both cases, the objects areenfolded in powerful narratives: the ÔbirthÕ of an enormous machine as apublic media event and the culmination of a race against time; and the engage-t of various kinds of narrative to reanimate the mortal remains of ancientgyptians. Casting them in narratives of life and death, involving a subtleintersection between the techniques of science and magic, is compounded byspecific ways of interpreting these objects in the museums concerned.II zooms in on the Royal Museum for Central Africa in Tervuren,elgium, from two distinctive perspectives: as a ritual site where artisticembellishment produces a very directed way of seeing Ð ÔCongo VisionÕ Ð theformer Belgian colony of Congo (Barbara Saunders); and a curatorial accountof subverting that vision through meticulous historicisation of the paths ofntroduction: Science, Magic and Religion00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 5two ÔmasterpiecesÕ, which were part of the temporary exhibition (Boris Wastiau).III comprises four cases of encounters between different curatorial andpublic actors and exhibited objects. The guided tour brings visitors toemotional as well as rational understandings of wildlife and its predicamentat Artis Zoo in Amsterdam, the Netherlands (Natasha Silva). Visitors toonte San Giovanni in Sardinia are received into a landscape that is a sourceof local pride and pastoral identity (a ÔcathedralÕ), turned symbol of the glo

balenvironment by a park authority apply
balenvironment by a park authority applying external scientific criteria of ecolog-ical management; both discourses produce Ôritual bodiesÕ that are transformedthe Ônatural magicÕ of the place (Tracey Heatherington). The encounterbetween tourists visiting the Nakambale Mission Museum to experience Ôreal,traditional AfricaÕ and locals who, in performing their tour of the mission andhomestead, confirm a sense of their own modernity, is one of Ôcreative mis-understandingÕ (Ian Fairweather). Curatorial scripting of the ÔRise and Fall ofodernismÕ exhibition in Weimar failed to anticipate the unintended con-sequences of creating this narrative of failed modernity in three differentlocations in the city, provoking Ôresistance fighterÕ reactions among critics andthe public (Barbara Wolbert). The zoo in the Dutch capital, the Sardinianheterotopic park, the modernist mission-turned-museum in northernstranded in Weimar, all point to site-specific meanings produced throughinteractions between the different parties engaged in creating and performingscripts with outcomes that are by no means predictable.The ÔmagicÕ can go seriously astray, leading to conflicts (between zoo guidesand keepers, or between park personnel and locals, or between curators andthe public) about ÔproperÕ curation; but it may also lead to forms of ÔcreativemisunderstandingÕ between tourist and local.IV, Sharon Macdonald revisits and explores the religion/museumanalogy, reviewing ways in which work on new religious movements contributesto understanding recent developments in museums. Macdonald goes on to illu-minate how contributions to this volume reßect these wider developmentsconcerning canonical authority/knowledge and subjective experience. She alsoanalyses the dilemmas of trying to achieve a balance between science and magic,enchantment and authority, for as ÔdifÞcultÕ a heritage site as the former Nazirallying grounds in Nuremberg. She shows there are contexts in which the semi-eligious aura of ritual sites can pose extraordinary and even moral dilemmas;where something has to be done with the past, however unsavoury, simplybecause of the way it obtrudes into the present. Macdonald concludes with theeminder that, since museums are such deeply political agencies in publicculture, their responsibility is not simply to enchant but also to educate Ð in thebroadest sense of the term. Let us turn now in more detail to the complex consti-tution of that agency in the wide variety of settings that this volume includes. Bouquet and Nuno Porto00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 6 IObjects of Science? Baby and the Mummies Science, as the sequence of terms in the title of this volume indicates, is thepoint of departure for trying to understand conte

mporary developments inmuseum culture ra
mporary developments inmuseum culture rather than a final destination. Many objects on public displayin science museums today are clearly subject to interpretative procedures thatexceed their status as objects of knowledge. The very idea of memorialising thefuture by devoting a gallery to how people conceptualised the future in thepast aims, as Harvey argues in the opening chapter, to engage the audiencewith the objects on view in an exercise of Ôimaginative reasoningÕ. ImaginativepersonalitiesÕ and playing down the rational scientific process of their workbehind the closed doors of the laboratory (cf. Barry 1998). This exhibitionarystrategy can clearly be seen in the ÔbirthÕ (commemorative unveiling) of a recon-struction of the first computer, known as Ôthe BabyÕ at the MSI in Manchester.Conversely, the scientific procedures may themselves be harnessed to enhancemuseum drama. Subjecting the mortal remains of dead Egyptians (ÔmummiesÕ)to ritualised scientific medical procedures may be incorporated to great effectin museum spectacle, as Wieczorkiewicz demonstrates in the second chapter.th of the Baby in Manchestereconstructing the first computer in terms of a Baby, for public ÔdeliveryÕ ona given date, involved both the creation of a ÔcradleÕ (the newly restored MSIin Manchester) and midwifery by scientific ÔpersonalitiesÕ. The race againstthe clock by the scientists involved in building this first computer turned thewhole event into a kind of dramatised family narrative. Harvey argues that inthemselves objects have no intrinsic power to enchant; this depends upon theexhibition makers. She suggests that museums are increasingly becomingplaces where the relationships between objects and people are brought out and explored. Creating settings where people can make imaginative sense ofobjects that have changed the world, nowadays often seem to involve recourseto mixtures of art and science reminiscent of the seventeenth-centuryunstkammer. The rituals surrounding the birth of the Baby played down therationalized scientific process, while playing up the human passions and strug-gle involved in making a machine work.This family narrative fits well with ManchesterÕs localising claim to be thenew brain centre of England. The birth was given full media coverage satellite communication, appealing in a commonsense way to the brave newworld of Manchester. The birth was about giving substance to genius: makingan object whose genealogy or creation story had been ÔlostÕ quite literallymaterialise, and rendering the human agents involved as highly visible mediantroduction: Science, Magic and Religion00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 7personalities. While it may be a little uncharitable to observe that MichelerreÕs i

story of Scienceefers to neither of the
story of Scienceefers to neither of the Manchester personalities inconnection with the development of the computer, it does suggest that thisis a very local origin story (cf. LŽvy in Serres, 1989 [1996]).Celebrating the Baby in this way gives voice and credence to ManchesterÕsglobal ambitions to being a science capital. The social drama of the birththat will make Manchester renowned throughout the world. In this respectthe MSI birth ritual makes an interesting contrast with the eminently modernperformance of tradition at Nakambale (see Fairweather, Chapter 7 in thisolume) which, by confining the past to the museum, brings the world to aemote place in Namibia. Manchester, by contrast, attempts to impose itsclaim upon the world by metaphorising it as that most incontrovertible ofevents: the birth of a baby. The hope of drawing visitors to Manchester is ofcourse also there.birth refers to the beginning of a personÕs life which, by museum magic,can be extended to the unveiling of a reconstructed machine, so too can deathÐ or more specifically the dead bodies of Egyptians treated with preservativesand wrapped in linen Ð be manipulated to great effect.gyptian collections are in several respects a key case. In her discussion ofan GennepÕs and TurnerÕs concepts of the ritual state of liminality Ð thebetwixt-and-between, out-of-this-world, zone through which initiates pass asthey transit from one social status to another Ð Duncan emphasises howmuseum visitors are led to commune with the spirits of the dead in theiraesthetic contemplation of particular works of art. How might this liminalstate work for other kinds of collections and more particularly for Egyptianmortal remains?A related question is why Egyptian mummies are considered to be a suit-able, indeed an educational, source of fascination for children. Spooky but atthe same time susceptible to neutralisation by scientific procedures, Egyptianemains have been pressed into service in contemporary stories, rather thandealing with the incorporation of Egypt into European history. Contempo-rary Egyptian exhibitions anticipate and cater for visitorsÕ (and above all,childrenÕs) fascination with mummies. Wieczorkiewicz unravels this fascina-tion in her chapter by examining the narrative genres in which they arecommonly placed, and then focussing on the transgressive act of unwrappingmummies and subjecting them to scientific procedures, such as medical diag-noses and plastic reconstruction. By personalising these remains but at thesame time distancing the viewer from them, the fact of death is somehow Bouquet and Nuno Porto00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 8may even involve the creation of a new ritual (as in Krakow). This particularway of exposing children (

and adults) to the ancient dead bodies o
and adults) to the ancient dead bodies of Egyptiansis also of interest because of what it suppresses about the nineteenth-centuryench campaigns in Egypt were part of Napoleonic imperial expansionand competition with other colonial powers, especially Britain and Germany,for control over strategic trading routes and oil. Egyptian objects wereetrieved from ruins and brought to Europe on the grounds that these werethe ancestors of the Greeks and therefore of western civilisation. Decipheringthe hieroglyphics on the Rosetta Stone was one of the crucial events in assign-ing this African civilisation to Europe, welding it onto the western genealogyand thus adding extra historical depth and a new identity component to theperiod before the Greeks. The presence of Egyptian collections in the newlyconstituted national museums that began to appear in the wake of the revo-lutionary act of opening the royal palace of the Louvre to the people (1793)added depth and richness to the genealogies of the respective nation states.or the new citizens of those states, the presence of Egyptian ancestorsassigned to specific spaces within their national ÔtemplesÕ, effectively demar-cated the frontier between civilisation and savagery. In Kristiania (now Oslo),for example, Egyptian items were the first to be registered in the new ethno-graphic museum collection, underlining both the Napoleonic origin ofwayÕs assignment to Sweden in the early nineteenth-century and thenationalist aspirations which later came to centre on that museum (Bouquet1996: 102Ð105). The African identity, as well as the colonial circumstancesunder which these collections came to Europe, are missing from many Egyp-tian narratives in European and American museums. These missing factorsgreatly contribute to the specific ways that Egyptian materials have been ritu-ally charged and are received outside as well as inside the museum. Focussingon mortal remains is an almost magical procedure that deflects attention fromthe historical manoeuvre involved, diverting it into the performance of a play.omesticated into contemporary popular culture by inflecting them withÔhorrorÕ, science then takes over to neutralise and re-enchant the resultingmaterials Ð especially for children but also, according to Wieczorkiewicz, tonineteenth-century Egyptian collections helped to constitute the histor-ical depth of western civilisation by splicing them onto the classical Greekgenealogy and purging them of their African identity, their removal nonethe-less implied that contemporary Egyptians (like their Greek counterparts) wereunable to take care of this heritage. This was the explicit justification for trans-porting archaeological materials to places where they would be valued,pro

tected and placed on display for modern
tected and placed on display for modern citizens who would be able todraw the proper conclusions. The mainly positive reception of the ancientntroduction: Science, Magic and Religion00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 9gyptians (notwithstanding Ôhorror moviesÕ showing reanimated mummies) isalmost diametrically opposed to the way that contemporary Congo popula-tions were evaluated during the same colonial period, as the case of the Belgianyal Museum for Central Africa (hereafter RMCA) at Tervuren aptly demon- IISite SpeciÞcs: the Case of TervurenContext, as the cases of Manchester and Krakow demonstrate, can be deci-sive for the specific meanings attaching to museum objects. The ÔsameÕscientific procedures for diagnosing and reconstructing Egyptian mummiesquite differently interpreted in Manchester and Krakow. In order toexamine the workings of site specificity in more detail, this section dwellsupon two different approaches to the RMCA, Tervuren, in Belgium: Saun-ders analyses the visual parameters imposed by the sculptures used to decoratethe building, and Wastiau gives an account of ongoing transformations in themeanings of two objects now in the Tervuren collection. (Belgian) Congolese others The sculptures adorning the RMCA cupola entrance at Tervuren are, as Saun-ders explains in her chapter, twofold in character: above, the allegorical figuresof art embody the civilising Belgian input to the relationship with the Congo:ÔCivilisationÕ, ÔSupportÕ, ÔProsperityÕ and (the end of) ÔSlaveryÕ. Below, thenaturalised figures of the African ÔArtistÕ, ÔChiefÕ, ÔWoodcutter/IdolmakerÕ,and ÔMaking FireÕ, make native culture visible for the Belgian public. Tervurenwas also a propaganda machine for the early twentieth-century Belgian colo-nial project, including missionaries as well as commercial interests, in Africa.The museum was privately financed with the aim of showing what there wasto be developed there. As a day trip out of town for the Brussels public,vuren in its park setting was both entertaining and inviting: King LeopoldIIÕs civilising mission for his people included showing them the enormouspossibilities for making money in the Congo. The 1898Ð99 ÔCongo StatesolutionÕ divided equatorial Africa into forty huge territorial units, each ofwhich was leased to a state-administered company to exploit and rule. is perhaps worth underlining the obviously international dimension ofcolonial projects in the context of national collections and museums. Belgiancolonialism included many non-Belgian nationals (merchants, explorers,missionaries and state representatives) who were integrated into local politi-cal activity during the 1870s and 1880s. In this way the Norwegian medicaldoctor HeibergÕs collection of nin

e hundred Congo pieces was donated to th
e hundred Congo pieces was donated to the Bouquet and Nuno Porto00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 10egian Ethnographic Museum from 1902 onwards (Bouquet 1996: 74Ð77).This example demonstrates the powerful model established by the BelgianRMCA Ð not least for an aspirant nation state such as nineteenth-centuryway, which was under colonial (Danish and later Swedish) rule. Thethnographic Museum became in fact a rallying point for nationalist aspira-tions. Founding an ethnographic museum was an important way of presentingthe nationÕs credentials, thereby constituting a conventional model of theworld (Pršsler 1996). aunders argues that the Tervuren entrance cupola actively coerces thevisitor into seeing the Congo in certain ways. The relations embodied in thefigures physically engage the viewer (whose gaze goes ÔupÕ to the allegoricalfigures and ÔdownÕ to the naturalistic ones), without requiring any mediationof ÔrepresentationsÕ or interiorisations of consciousness. This physical engage-ment echoes that identified by Wieczorkiewicz, for whom visitorsÕ stoopingto examine the tilted sarcophagus in Krakow marks the inception of a newritual. SaundersÕ visitors to Tervuren are in some respects comparable touncanÕs ideal visitor: they perform a disquieting ritual of citizenship withina scenario that has frozen early-twentieth-century Belgian understandings ofthe colonial project. The spell has yet to be broken. The final part of hertCongo Museum that. The extent to which meaning can be transformed by active curatorialintervention that unsettles the meanings embedded in the site, is the subjectof WastiauÕs chapter. Anthropologist-curator WastiauÕs account of the life histories of two CongolesemasterpiecesÕ, which were included in the temporary exhibition, ExItCongo-MuscuratorÕs perspective, as well as considering how collections are constituted andhow they are charged with meaning in the course of their life histories. Wastiauexemplifies the creative and generative use of sites and collections, in whichcuratorial intention and mediation can play a critical role.astiauÕs curatorial aim was to break the spell of Tervuren (Wastiau 2000).is chapter focusses on a pair of objects and one collector, illuminating themaking of ÔmasterpiecesÕ, as certain well-known and well-travelled Congopieces are nowadays classified. Artistic intervention contemporised the histor-ical narrative of the first part of the exhibition (Exit Congo) in the secondand third parts (Ex-Congo Museum; Exit Museum).This exhibition succeeded in generating controversy and debate, demon-strating not only hostility and lament about breaking the spell of themasterpieces not to mention the RMCA itself, but also support for doing justntroduction: Science

, Magic and Religion00_Bouquet 23/8/04
, Magic and Religion00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 11that (see Arnaut 2001; Corbey 2001). This polemic was conducted beyondthe museum (cf. Porto 2000). One of the most interesting outcomes of this temporary exhibition was to revive academic/university interest in themuseum. There is a good chance that this will actively contribute to thecreation of a new identity for the museum and new interest in it on the partof contemporary Belgian and international publics. oes such an intervention break with the ceremonial role of the curator ifthat is understood as mediating the museumÕs officially approved message tothe public? The notion that a curator could somehow betray the trust placedin him by the museum (as was the case with Wastiau, cf. Bouquet 1998) indi-cates the centrality of agency Ð including the curatorÕs Ð in constituting themuseum as a ritual site. This agency, along with its contradictory potential,is missing from DuncanÕs model of the museum as a ritual site for reaffirm-ing citizenship, which anticipates identification with what is shown and thenarrative behind it. In some ways, of course, curatorial authority has beenundermined by what Macdonald and Silverstone refer to as the Ôcultural revo-lutionÕ that took place in many museums from the late 1980s onwards(Macdonald and Silverstone 1991). Curatorial authority has been temperedin many museums by new marketing practices aimed at producing Ôpublic-friendlyÕ exhibitions for entrance-fee-paying customers, thereby giving a wholerange of other museum staff (notably from Communications, Presentation,esign, Education and Marketing departments) as important a voice in theexhibition-making process as that of the curator, at least in theory. Despite allupon the ability to develop and unveil new creations, which relies heavily oncuratorial knowledge and creativity. Many contemporary blockbuster exhibi-tions stress completely new interpretations of works of art resulting fromesearch; for example, careful scrutiny of the relationship between Van Goghboth paintersÕ work (Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam, 2001). er much of a rupture ExItCongoMuseum may represent in the waythat Central Africa was constituted at Tervuren, the question remains: to whatextent is any curator bound by the very nature of the location, space andcollection at his or her disposal to reformulate, certainly, but still to enchant?The fact that the curatorial team intends a specific message does not guaran-tee that the message will be received in the same form. For Wastiau, theexhibition actually starts with fragments of the third part: contemporaryartworks were interjected from the entrance hall and throughout the perma-nent galleries deliberately disturbing the conventional displays.

The first partencouraged visitors to ref
The first partencouraged visitors to reflect on the histories and stories of the artworks, bytheir unconventional placement, lighting and documentation. The secondsection questioned the way Congolese artefacts were naturalised in the Bouquet and Nuno Porto00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 12museumÕs space. Between the first section, dealing with the objectsÕ prove-nance, and the second about Ôafter acquisitionÕ (their use and abuse in privateand public displays), was a transitional room evoking transportation. A tallwhite wall marked the passage to section three, with installations directlyquestioning TervurenÕs museography and practice. Behind the wall were instal-lations by guest artists relating to broader issues including race, history,exhibiting, and interpretation, some of which were exhibited on the groundThere is, however, no guarantee that the visitor will receive the curatorÕsmessage precisely as it was intended (cf. Wolbert, Chapter 8 in this volume).astiau and his colleaguesÕ choreography of Tervuren space could in fact beinterpreted as pursuing a quite Turnerian formulation, despite intending adiametrically opposed argument: up the spiral staircase on one side of thebuilding as a beginning; through a seemingly conventional Ð if eccentricallylit Ð presentation of the history of the collection; into a central area of limbo(quoting the much-used packing-case motif) directly above the small rotunda;followed by artistsÕ installations (including the supermarket trolley filled withÔbargainsÕ [masterpieces]), the toy railway track, and down the spiral staircaseon the other side of the building to some ÔoccupiedÕ glass cases below. Duncancertainly anticipated the misreading visitor, but failed to consider the impli-cations of various forms of agency for the museum as a ritual site. Curatorialand other forms of agency are central concerns of the next section. IIIEncounters, Performances and UnpredictablesThis section focusses on issues of agency that arise through particular kindsof performances in four different ritual sites. If the birth of the Baby (Harvey,Chapter 1 in this volume) was a one-off ritual performance, dramatising thehuman struggle to reconstruct a machine as a classic life-cycle the guided tour of an established site tends to comprise a given repertoire ofobjects, stories and other highpoints, yet to leave room for embroidery andelaboration. SilvaÕs chapter demonstrates how the volunteer guides at Artisoo mediate visitor appreciation of the specific form of animal sacrifice thatthis most popular of museum collections entails. She takes us on a guidedtour of Artis Zoo in Amsterdam that deliberately conducts visitors ÔbackstageÕ,telling stories about the animals but also showing t

he complex social relationsthat develop
he complex social relationsthat develop between zoo keepers, their charges, volunteer guides and thepublic. While going ÔbackstageÕ at a zoo may have developed into a somewhatpredictable routine, the underlying moral ambivalence of keeping animals incaptivity combined with ongoing tensions arising from the differences inprofessional status between keepers and guides is likely to provide visitors withntroduction: Science, Magic and Religion00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 13oing behind the scenes at Artis Zoo oo animals are not simply ÔthereÕ in their cages or enclosures but are activelymade ÔpresentÕ by zoo guides. These are the people to convey the personali-ties, accompanying stories and the sense of order for visitors to this highlyidiosyncratic collection and environment.uided tours of Artis Zoo include not only the celebrated feeding ofanimals, but also go behind the scenes Ð into the kitchen where the meals arecomposed, or among the pipes and filter system behind the aquarium. Thisprivileged access to what Goffman (1959) has referred to as the backstage areaof social performances admits visitors to a zone normally out of bounds forthe public, inviting them to experience the position of a zoo employee Ð ina way similar to BennettÕs (1995: 67) argument about nineteenth-centuryside of power. Visitors to the zoo are invited to stand in the shoes of theirguide, learning to see and to know the animals through their eyes and expe-rience. The fact that guides are not ÔrealÕ zoo personnel does, however, alsointroduce a measure of ambiguity and sometimes even verbal conflict(between guides and keepers) into the tour. Going behind the scenes is alsoperhaps about ÔseeingÕ certain civic responsibilities regarding these often largeand exotic creatures, in what is explicitly a ÔfunÕ visit to areas not normallyaccessible to the public. There is an invitation implicit in the knowledgegained through privileged access to assume greater responsibility toward thesespecimens of endangered wildlife.isitors on a guided tour of the zoo are being initiated in several differentways: these may include gossiping about animals (in the way that anthro-pologists might gossip about people), thereby personalising and oftenanthropomorphising them (Silva gives the example of penguins in ÔtuxedosÕ);or it may involve seeing beneath the surface of the easily perceptible (ÔfeedingtimeÕ), through a visit to the kitchens; or having your attention drawn toeclusive or lesser-known animals whose existence might otherwise be over-looked. The enormous popularity of the zoo with all sections of thepopulation means that giving the zoo visit a serious slant is a tempting option,certainly in the Netherlands. The guided visit through the zoo

seems toinvolve a trade off between the
seems toinvolve a trade off between the pleasure derived from maximum insight andthe responsibility that goes with this sort of inside information. Getting toknow the animals leads to an appreciation of the sacrifice that they areequired to make by being in captivity. Going to the zoo is a collective ritualthat almost every child undergoes either suggests that parents and teachers see it as an opportunity to teach somethingas well as being a super-popular destination. The ephemerality of animalsÕ lives strikes a chord of recognition with humans: the animal condition is alsothe human one. Although the zoo might, arguably, just as easily be seen as Bouquet and Nuno Porto00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 14the ultimate expression of rational man, playing God, managing and control-ling the natural world this does not seem to be the tone of the guided tour,in Artis Zoo, at least. Set in the heart of Amsterdam, the appeal to moralconscience and responsibility that can be discerned in the midst of all the funis a reminder of the moral fibre still at the core of this local setting (cf. SchamaThe way an external discourse on the environment articulates with localappreciation of the landscape is the subject of Tracey HeatheringtonÕs chapteron Monte San Giovanni in Sardinia. The designation of certain landscapefeatures as being of outstanding natural beauty, requiring protection, alsoinvolves forms of structured contact (such as nature excursions) that enablevisitors to get closer to Sardinian nature. As with the guided tour at the zoo,these excursions enact environmental identities: learning takes place by visit-ing, seeing and appreciating Nature. Alternative local narratives about Montean Giovanni emphasise, by contrast, local community values and ÔtraditionÕforming locality vs. performing ecologyonte San Giovanni was already a local landmark or Ôanthropological placeÕ,in Marc AugŽÕs (1995) sense of being filled with history, identities and socialelations, before its sudden redefinition according to external ÔecologicalÕ crite-ria as the centre of a natural park. Monte San Giovanni was already definedlocal people as a ÔcathedralÕ Ð a key symbolic place of pilgrimage to whichpeople felt attached both on religious and family grounds. Local feeling aboutonte San Giovanni is connected to its survival as common land in the faceof nineteenth-century enclosure. The continuation of pastoral and commu-nitarian traditions helped to save the commons from deforestation and is oneof the reasons for strong local feelings about this place as being theirs andpride in showing it to visitors.The redefinition of Monte San Giovanni as a uniquely valuable symbol ofglobal environmental heritage places a different frame around t

he landscape.The formalisation of the Ge
he landscape.The formalisation of the Gennargentu National Park enshrines features of thenatural landscape as a potent source of both knowledge and aesthetics, aseatherington puts it. This frame also, however, implies techniques of parkmanagement imagined as custodial techniques. This management effectivelyconstitution of the landscape byframing the park as a space set aside from human use, in its turn a kind ofsacred space Ð idealised and ritualised as well as regulated and controlled.k-organised excursions to Monte San Giovanni effectively sanctify ecolog-ical identities, emulating scientific observation and sharing in the project ofscientific conservation that should enable the visitor to get closer to nature.ntroduction: Science, Magic and Religion00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 15the same time, it fosters a sense of responsibility for preserving the purityof nature in terms of what might be called Ôenvironmental citizenshipÕ. Locals,contrast, think of the purity of nature as evincing cultural authenticity:eenacting the experience of shepherds, retracing the steps of the Catholicprocessions that used to go to the site of an old mediaeval church on thesummit of the mountain until World War Two, imbibing the salubrious springThe range of discourses generated by Monte San Giovanni over the pastthirty years (local, cultural and external, scientific/ecological), demonstratehow the meaning of landscape becomes diversified (a ÔheterotopiaÕ) throughthe process of musealisation (cf. Hetherington 1996). Local mediators (resi-dents, tourist guides, forest rangers) are responsible for constituting andnegotiating both external and internal visions of the landscape. This adjust-ment, producing a plurality of meanings among tourists, environmentalists,nature lovers and residents, inevitably alters local perception of their own keyA comparable effect is found in the performance of heritage at a museumin northern Namibia (Fairweather). It is important to point out that themuseum model colonised not only Europe and the West but has also trav-elled significantly farther afield Ð right up to the present day (see Pršsler1996). FairweatherÕs analysis of the ex-Finnish Mission Museum in post-independence Namibia demonstrates how colonisation itself can be musealisedfrom the other direction. akambale double act: performing heritage taff and visitors to the Nakambale Museum in Namibia are involved in acomplex process of (re)constructing their culture. Claiming to preserve localtraditionsÕ and ÔcultureÕ is modern, Fairweather argues, and has ideologicaldimensions associated with Namibian nation building. These ÔtraditionsÕ wereshaped by the encounter with Europeans, and the Nakambale Museum cele-brates both the arriva

l of Christianity and missionaries and l
l of Christianity and missionaries and local customs andtraditions. Staff and community in fact reclaim the colonial past objectifiedin the mission house turned museum as their own since this was the way theycame in contact with the wider world. The paradox inherent in the museumis resolved, according to Fairweather, through the performances that take placethere: foreign tourists who come to visit Olukonda in search of the tradi-tional are given a guided tour, a meal and the opportunity to purchase localproducts from the museum shop. The performers, on the other hand, bothidentify with but also distance themselves from the traditional by pointingout how different things were in the past. They demonstrate to themselves, asell as to non-Oshiwambo speakers, their modernity in being able to perform Bouquet and Nuno Porto00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 16tradition so well that they can attract visitors from the wider world, therebynchantment in the Nakambale case consists in the double act of beingable to conjure up tourists in this remote part of North-Central Namibia, andbeing able to put on folklore performances and a meal for them. At the samestronger position for Oshiwambo speakers at that level. The syncretism betweenChristianity and local narratives (as in the passage from Ôsavagery to civilisa-tionÕ that forms part of the display at the museum), demonstrates that this isnot a straightforward case of exporting the museum model. Instead, themuseum as an institution is ingested, digested and remoulded into new forms:the competitive claims made by local people through their museum demon-strate a greater degree of open-endedness than DuncanÕs original definition ofthe museum as a ritual site anticipated. There is room for differing interpre-tations not only between official museum messages and the reception of thosemessages, but also in the highly ambiguous performances that are staged inand around museums. The Nakambale case provides a good starting point forconsideringhow the dynamic character of meaning invested in museums artic-ulates with strategic management of representation on behalf of certain groupsvis-ˆ-vis current social issues. Bringing contemporary postcolonial culture intoa former colonial mission is one form this process can take.The past may, however, come to haunt the present in quite unintended (asfar as curatorial intention goes) ways, as WolbertÕs contribution shows.ating German pastsThe internationalisation of locality associated with the Manchester (Harvey),onte San Giovanni (Heatherington), and Nakambale (Fairweather), resur-faces in the way Weimar chose to give expression to its nomination asopean cultural capital in 1999. Barbara WolbertÕs analysis of the art exhi-bition,

ÔRise and Fall of the ModernÕ, is situat
ÔRise and Fall of the ModernÕ, is situated in a city which, likepostindustrial Manchester, became a candidate for recuperation Ð although,of course, the case of Weimar is qualified by German reunification after thefall of the Wall.The sites connected by the exhibition trajectory (the Castle and Gaufo-um) were not associated with the Nazi past, which had always been lockedaway in Buchenwald. However, in the event, an unanticipated problem arosethrough the superimposition of several ÔpastsÕ on the same highly chargedspace. This was not initially seen as a problem with which the exhibition hadto deal. The attempt to diffuse this effect, transforming it through artisticintervention into something tangible for debate, produced instead a kind ofedundancy as an art exhibition. The failure of the curators responsible tontroduction: Science, Magic and Religion00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 17create the required technology of enchantment (Wolbert refers to theamateurishÕ, botched hanging in the Castle, and the propped-up art from theGDR period), led to unified public outcry. Journalists from both former Eastand the West, politicians and those writing in the visitorsÕ book felt insultedthe treatment of the art at the hands of arrogant curators. Wolbert arguesthat the story repeated in the newspapers about the fateful combination ofsite, art and curation perfectly reflecting the collective malaise of the reluc-tantly reunited Germany, was in fact a myth. The terms of the outcry werein fact unanimous (about art and professionalism) yet came to express anxi-eties and frustrations connected with East/West divisions.The outcome was that the great occasion for joining the European club,on one of its most prestigious circuits, was spoiled by press insistence on unre-solved conflicts still simmering beneath the surface. The idea of invoking ainto a witchesÕ brew of supposed internal divisions, issuing forth from severalpasts. As Wolbert points out, DuncanÕs model disregards the actual relation-ship between curator and visitor, confounding as it does the curator(s) withthe institution. Her analysis of the Weimar exhibit shows that the institution,the site and the curator(s) are unpredictable components of the museum; andthat the volatile mixture produced in their interaction with visitors may feeddirectly back into the local social context.These ethnographic approaches to exhibitions, whether in conventionalmuseums or elsewhere, invite discussion of DuncanÕs model of the museumas a ritual site at two related levels. The first of these is theoretical and relatesto TurnerÕs model, from which she departs. The second concerns the broadnotion of museum operating in various ways in the different settingsdescribed, which

suggests that public involvement with mu
suggests that public involvement with museum culture as away of making coherent statements about social identity is far more complexthan she anticipated. Turner himself proposed that liminoid phenomena occurin very different situations, as he perceived in shifting his analysis fromAfrican rites of passage to Latin American and European Catholic pilgrimage.uncan seems to have underestimated the specificities of liminoid phenom-ena in modern contexts when restricting TurnerÕs formulation to Europeanor Turner, this shift implied considering individual experience rather thangeneral social structure. The liminoid would, in these cases, not be located inthe domain of Ôthe wholeÕ social group, but among clusters of individuals who,although identified with one another, might be situated in transnationalspaces, and think of themselves as westerners (cf. Turner 1973). These peoplemight also think of themselves as belonging to a community defined by sharedcommon practice such as, critically in TurnerÕs formulation, attending theatre Bouquet and Nuno Porto00_Bouquet_Q3.3_3_3L 2/9/04 4:28 PM Page 18performances (Turner 1986). DuncanÕs reading of Turner, and her seminalapproach to museums from this perspective, fails to incorporate the diversityof ritual experience that these ritual settings permit. This critique had alreadybeen levelled at Turner himself by, for example, Gerholm (1988) who arguedthat ritual (in what he claims to be a postmodern view) is structured by non-ritual procedures. These account for the fact that it is the subjectÕs point ofview that determines whether or not a concrete situation is experienced as aritual situation. Attending a theatre performance may, from this perspective,be sheer entertainment. The same applies to visiting museums, zoos or naturalparks: it depends how visitors define the situation, which may in turn dependon many other factors. The main issue concerning ritual experience associ-ated with museum visiting is that it involves not only the visitor but also (aswith theatre) ritual officials and volunteers: curators, designers, exhibitionA second issue connects with this theoretical position, although it mightalso be seen as a product of recent history. This concerns increasing publicawareness of the museological process, and its corresponding impact uponboth exhibitions and museum politics (see Wastiau, Heatherington, and Fair-eather). As Karp (1992) reminds us, museums and museum-like sites maybe included in what he calls (following Gramsci) the regulatory devices of civilsociety. For Karp, Ôcivil societyÕ includes not only Ð or even mainly Ð institu-tions, but covers ongoing processes of negotiation about social identities.useums are actively engaged in this discussio

n and hence in the negotiationof social
n and hence in the negotiationof social identities. In this respect, contesting a museum exhibition may rangefrom ignoring the museumÕs existence to appropriating it as a cultural frameto value places and people otherwise invisible. DuncanÕs focus on Europeanand American art museums narrows the scope of this process to one categoryof museums among many. If, as the cases included in this volume seem todemonstrate, the ritual spectrum is much broader, then its analysis mustmortal animals and immortal mummies. In pursuing how and why museumculture participates in the enchantment of the world, the various chapters ofthis book substantially adjust DuncanÕs framework by adding agency to theactors involved. The orchestration of liminality is a complex collective endeav-our in the museum-visiting process, and we now need to return to the issueof reception. IVDilemmas of Enchantmentthe musealisation of culture is an inevitable accompaniment to the processof modernisation, as Vaessen (1986) has argued, whereby objects that haventroduction: Science, Magic and Religion00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 19fallen into disuse as well as newly created objects are used to fill the gap lefttoo rapid change, the capacity to reengage with this material either as adefining criteria of the modern citizen (Bourdieu and Darbel 1991; Solberg1994). We return to this issue in connection with the fall of the Arapeshtambaran cult and ensuing production of heritage in the final section of thisintroduction.acdonald addresses the new religiosity in the concluding part of the book,where she reviews the preceding chapters in terms of contemporary dilemmasfor the museum as a ritual site. She examines the shift of attention and expe-rience from the church to other sites which may, in turn, be transformed intoritual places. Their recognition as significant destinations containing meaning-ful objects depends on various kinds of knowledge that makes them significantfor different segments of the population.acdonald takes WeberÕs notion of the disenchantment of the world as herpoint of departure for discussing the new forms of religiosity sought by themodern self, relating this to the project of museums and comparable sites.The dilemmas associated with the process of musealising the former Nazirallying ground in Nuremberg underline the deeply political agency ofmuseums. The past haunts the Nuremberg project in a way that resembles theeimar case (Wolbert). The difference lies perhaps in the explicit use of artin Weimar in a temporary exhibition, which raises the question of whetheracdonaldÕs concept of enchantment is equivalent to GellÕs formulation ofart as a technology of enchantment (1992). Gell conceived of art as a tech-nology that is

magical in the sense that the resulting
magical in the sense that the resulting artefact seems to exceedproductive labour. However, the agency of curators and other museum staffas well as visitors in producing this enchantment, as repeatedly demonstratedin the contributions to this volume, suggests that the museum effectivelychannels the agency of modern subjects in several directions. useum MagicCarol DuncanÕs theorisation of the art museum as a ritual site demonstratedhow a modern, post-Enlightenment, elite institution is scripted as a rite ofcitizenship. The neglected issue of agency, both of museum staff and of visi-as the contributors to this volume elucidate in their explorations of variousexhibitionary configurations both in Europe and beyond. Enchantment,whether in a Namibian village, an Amsterdam zoo, a Sardinian natural park,or a Mancunian science museum, emerges as something that not only involves Bouquet and Nuno Porto00_Bouquet_Q3.3_3_3L 2/9/04 4:28 PM Page 20actively constituted by both producers and consumers through the repertoireof objects, images and places they have at their disposal. The museum as a ritual site involves not only the physical constitution ofcollection, buildings and choreography in space, but also the active mediationritual specialists, who by no means operate according to precepts concern-ing the ideal citizen even in the contemporary market-oriented incarnation oftarget groupÕ or consumer. This is fortunate since visitors themselves may beinterested in appropriating the museum for their own purposes Ð actively andnot always predictably. However political the agency of the museum may be,there are likely to be curators who manage to subvert or alter the course ofofficial messages just as there are visitors who domesticate the museum fortheir own purposes. In this sense, citizenship (if that is what the museum isaboutÕ) is subject to continuous overhaul through the museological processalinowski inspires one possible explanation for why this might be sonowadays. If we connect contemporary social processes of identity formula-tion in a disenchanted world with the role that museums and museum-likesites play in it, it may be that such institutions are inherently magical. Whatmuseums and processes of contemporary identity formation have in commonis that they can be grounded on practically anything which may, in turn, besubjected to musealisation. This observation implies that museums are lessabout things in themselves than about the social networks that bring thesemarked things to the core of some signifying process. These are long-termprocesses that converge in different ways upon museums and similar siteswhere they serve to reenchant the world. universe, indeterminate enough to accommodate multiple layer

s of identifi-cation, and thereby provid
s of identifi-cation, and thereby providing open-ended comments on everyday life. Thisquality is partially derived from their seemingly extraterrestrial origin Ð themuseum setting is out of this world, in liminoid time and space. In thisespect they seem to be very much like Trobriand gardens. Gardens, to borrowfrom MalinowskiÕs account of yam planting (and its insightful reading by Gell(1988: 9)), are not simply about growing yams, but about their planting tothe accompaniment of the proper spells and procedures. Gell refers to a kindof Ôideal gardenÕ, which strongly resembles the exhibition concept and specialeffects, which are developed on paper in a long-term process leading up tothe opening. Applied to the case of museums, the magic involved is as diverseas contemporary identities are fragmented, and may include exorcisms ineimar, ecological empowering at the Amsterdam zoo, rewriting nationalhistory at Tervuren, or domesticating technology at Manchester by walkingaround inside a computer. useum magic is, in other words, a way of reflecting upon the world Ðthings, ourselves, others, the past or the future Ð by creating a framework thatntroduction: Science, Magic and Religion00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 21is both orderly yet more than that: it uses special effects, such as lighting,which resemble the TrobriandersÕ magical prisms. It is magic in that it subjectsonly part Ð a small but significant part Ð of that world to such reflection insome ideal historically and socially situated manner. For this reason, museummagic works by trial and error and is always provisional. It is not magical toeverybody all the time, nor is it completely predictable (as with yam magic).cinema, theatre, advertising and other practices implying liminoid suspensionof disbelief Ð are difficult to understand in purely rational terms. Museummagic does, however, surpass certain other technologies of enchantment sinceit provides a spatial venue for wider ritual processes that endure beyond thetime frame normally available to film, theatre or advertising. If the liminalspace of the museum enables visitors to grasp some part of the world inanother light, museum specialists Ð such as curators, architects, and design-ostscriptum: The Past, its Presence and the FutureWhen Tuzin revisited Ilahita in the mid-1980s, the tambaran cult had beendramatically unmasked at a Sunday morning Revivalist (Christian) service; inthe course of his fieldwork, he was to observe the cultural process of memo-rialising the tambaran (Tuzin 1997: 142). For if the revelation that the secretmenÕs club was a ÔhoaxÕ led in the first instance to the destruction of cult para-memoryambaran came to stand for ÔIlahitaÕs past greatness É tainted É butnonethele

ss gloriousÕ (1997: 142). The instigator
ss gloriousÕ (1997: 142). The instigators of the tambaran iconoclasmwanted to remember, but also redefine the value and relevance of, those tradi-tions, putting them safely at bay from the selfÕ (). Life and practice were,according to Tuzin, transformed by emotional distancing into heritage andeminiscence. The ambivalence of this redefined tambaran, a source of bothattraction and revulsion, is reminiscent of human attitudes toward cagedwildlife at the zoo (Silva), or the transgressive allure of unwrapping mummiesieczorkiewicz) or even, although in a different way, the Nazi rallyinggrounds at Nuremburg (Macdonald). As Tuzin observes, Ôa moral and cogni-tive dissonance was cast in the form of an Òincriminating charterÓ, in this casethe promulgation of a ÒheritageÓ, a cultural enshrinement that ironicallyindicts todayÕs modernist ideology and deprives it of unquestioned legitimacyÕ(1997: 142). FairweatherÕs interpretation of modernism at the colonialmission turned museum suggests, however, that the making of heritage may Bouquet and Nuno Porto00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 22When Revivalists went as far as staging performances of tambaran musicfor a visiting ethnomusicologist (1997: 221Ð222, n.15), they were first criti-cised by anti-Revivalist traditionalists for (as they saw it) trivialising custom.once the performances got underway, everyone was soon caught up in a Ôfestive, nostalgic atmosphereÕ. Tuzin affirms, Ôthe experience demon-strated, however Ð rather subversively, from the standpoint of the traditionalists ÐÉ that Tambaran art can be secularized, and that doing so might be preferableto totally abandoning itÕ (The detailed cases in this volume illuminate how the ritual processes ofmuseum magic are an integral component of contemporary culture. We makeinto heritage the ÔstuffÕ (Charles HuntÕs term) that comes down to us throughintense social and political negotiation, frequently involving performancesthat engage visitors with ritual specialists, either directly or indirectly. Theconcentration of meaning in specific spaces uses diverse exhibitionary tech-the emotional, bordering on the religious. As Eco reminds us, Ô[t]o enter theConservatoire des Arts et MŽtiers in Paris, you Þrst cross an eighteenth-centurycourtyard and step into an old abbey church, now part of a later complex, butoriginally part of a priory. You enter and are stunned by a conspiracy in whichare juxtaposedÕ (Eco [1989] 2001: 7). GŸnther DomenigÕs diagonal slice designfor the documentation centre in the Ð unrestored Ð Nuremberg Colosseumprovides a stunning example of the magical as well as the political sensitivityof making heritage (see Macdonald, this volume). Despite the rhetorical empha-sis placed on the pastness or

alterity of the material involved, atten
alterity of the material involved, attending to itscultural uses in the present will provide anthropologists, together with contem-porary scholars from a wide range of disciplinary backgrounds, withinterpretative challenges for the foreseeable future. would like to thank Boris Wastiau and Barbara Wolbert for their helpful comments on thisintroduction. We are particularly grateful to an anonymous reader of the manuscript for a number1.Palau de la Musica in Barcelona was the venue for the 1996 EASA opening.The present volume developed out of the workshop, ÔScience, Magic and Religion, theuseum as a Ritual SiteÕwhich we convened at the Krakow conference Ð in one of the old lec-ture rooms at the Jagiellonian University.ntroduction: Science, Magic and Religion00_Bouquet 23/8/04 2:51 PM Page 233.Although it should be noted that as deÞned by ICOM and certain national museumorganisations would include zoos. The wider term as deÞned by UNESCO includesboth material and immaterial sites, which certainly border on if not overlap with the termArnaut, K. (2001) ÔExItCongoMuseum en de Africanisten. Voor een etnograÞe van de Belgische (post-)coloniale conditieÕ. ieuwsbrief Belgische Vereniging voorAfricanistenhttp://home4.worldonline.be/~ababva/forum/forum20/KA_on-Places: Introduction to an Anthropology of SupermodernityLondon and New York: Verso. English translation by John Howe of on-Lieux, Introduction ˆ une anthropologie de la surmodernitŽ. ditions du Seuil, 1992.arry, A. (1998) ÔOn Interactivity: Consumers, Citizens and CultureÕ, in Macdonald, S.The Politics of Display: Museums, Science, Culture.London and New York:outledge, pp. 98Ð117.Bennett, T. (1995) The Birth of the Museum: History, Theory, Politics. New York London: Routledge.ans og Samling/ Bringing It All Back Home to the Oslo Universitythnographic Museum. slo: Scandinavian University Press.ÐÐÐÐÐÐ (1998) ÔStrangers in paradise. An encounter with Fossil Man at the Dutchuseum of Natural HistoryÕ, in Macdonald, S. (ed.), The Politics of Display:useums, Science, Culture.London: Routledge, pp. 159Ð72.Bourdieu, P. and Darbel, A. (1991) The Love of Art. European Art Museums and theirCambridge: Polity Press. English translation by Carole Beattie andickMerriman of Õamour de lÕart. Paris: Les Editions de Minuit, 1969.Corbey, R. (2001) ÔExItCongoMuseum. The travels of Congolese artÕ, nthropology, 17(3), pp. 26Ð28.ivilizing Rituals: Inside Public Art Museums.ork: Routledge.outledge.)FoucaultÕs Pendulum. London: Vintage. ell, A. (1988) ÔTechnology and MagicÕ, nthropology Today, 4(2), pp. 6Ð9.ÐÐÐÐÐÐ (1992) ÔThe Technology of Enchantment and the Enchantment of TechnologyÕ,in Coote, J. and Shelton, A. (eds),nthropology, Art and Aesthetics. Oxford: Oxfordniversity P

ress, pp. 40Ð63.erholm, T. (1988) ÔOn Ri
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