Touch in Museums
Policy and Practice in Object Handling
Herausgeber: Chatterjee, Helen
Touch in Museums
Policy and Practice in Object Handling
Herausgeber: Chatterjee, Helen
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The value of touch and object handling in museums is little understood, despite the overwhelming weight of anecdotal evidence which confirms the benefits of physical interaction with objects.
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The value of touch and object handling in museums is little understood, despite the overwhelming weight of anecdotal evidence which confirms the benefits of physical interaction with objects.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 312
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Dezember 2008
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 155mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 522g
- ISBN-13: 9781847882387
- ISBN-10: 1847882382
- Artikelnr.: 23575549
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 312
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Dezember 2008
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 155mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 522g
- ISBN-13: 9781847882387
- ISBN-10: 1847882382
- Artikelnr.: 23575549
Helen J. Chatterjee is Deputy Director of Museums & Collections and a Lecturer in Biology at University College London.
List of IllustrationsList of ContributorsIntroductionHelen ChatterjeePART I
What Do We Mean By Touch?1 Museums, modernity and the class politics of
touching objects Fiona Candlin2 Making sense of touchCharles Spence and
Alberto Gallace3 Emotional touch: A neuroscientific overviewHugo Critchley4
Explorations in exploratory touch: The role of feeling in touching
objectsFrancis McGlonePART II New Technologies for Enhancing Object
Interpretation5 The use of haptic interfaces in haptics researchChristos
Giachritsis6 Tactual explorations: A tactile interpretation of a museum
exhibit through tactile artworks and augmented realityIsil Onol7 CONTACT:
Digital modelling of object and process in artefact teaching Roger Doonan
and Michael Boyd8 Out of touch? Digital technologies, ethnographic objects
and sensory ordersGraeme Were9 A versatile large-scale multimodal VR system
for cultural heritage visualisationCeline Loscos10 Touch technologies and
museum accessRobert Zimmer, Janis Jefferies and Mandayam SrinivasanPART III
Touch and Memory11 A memory for touch: The cognitive psychology of tactile
memoryAlberto Gallace and Charles Spence12 Aesthetics of touch among the
elderlyMichael Rowlands13 Reminiscence: Recent work at The British
MuseumLaura Phillips14 Getting a handle on the past: The use of objects in
reminiscence workBernie ArighoPART IV Therapeutic Approaches to Touch15
Enrichment programmes in hospitals: Using museum loan boxes in University
College London HospitalGuy Noble and Helen Chatterjee16 See, touch and
enjoy: Newham University Hospital's nostalgia room, Jackie O'Sullivan17
Measuring the 'difficult to measure'Caroline SelaiPART V Knowledge Transfer
in Object Handling 18 How accessible are museums today?Marcus Weisen.19 The
British Museum in Pentonville Prison: Dismantling barriers through touch
and handlingJane Samuels, The British Museum.20 The amenable object:
working with diaspora communities through a psychoanalysis of
touchBernadette Lynch.The FutureTouch and the value of object handling:
Final conclusions for a new sensory museologyDevorah Romanek and Bernadette
Lynch.Index
What Do We Mean By Touch?1 Museums, modernity and the class politics of
touching objects Fiona Candlin2 Making sense of touchCharles Spence and
Alberto Gallace3 Emotional touch: A neuroscientific overviewHugo Critchley4
Explorations in exploratory touch: The role of feeling in touching
objectsFrancis McGlonePART II New Technologies for Enhancing Object
Interpretation5 The use of haptic interfaces in haptics researchChristos
Giachritsis6 Tactual explorations: A tactile interpretation of a museum
exhibit through tactile artworks and augmented realityIsil Onol7 CONTACT:
Digital modelling of object and process in artefact teaching Roger Doonan
and Michael Boyd8 Out of touch? Digital technologies, ethnographic objects
and sensory ordersGraeme Were9 A versatile large-scale multimodal VR system
for cultural heritage visualisationCeline Loscos10 Touch technologies and
museum accessRobert Zimmer, Janis Jefferies and Mandayam SrinivasanPART III
Touch and Memory11 A memory for touch: The cognitive psychology of tactile
memoryAlberto Gallace and Charles Spence12 Aesthetics of touch among the
elderlyMichael Rowlands13 Reminiscence: Recent work at The British
MuseumLaura Phillips14 Getting a handle on the past: The use of objects in
reminiscence workBernie ArighoPART IV Therapeutic Approaches to Touch15
Enrichment programmes in hospitals: Using museum loan boxes in University
College London HospitalGuy Noble and Helen Chatterjee16 See, touch and
enjoy: Newham University Hospital's nostalgia room, Jackie O'Sullivan17
Measuring the 'difficult to measure'Caroline SelaiPART V Knowledge Transfer
in Object Handling 18 How accessible are museums today?Marcus Weisen.19 The
British Museum in Pentonville Prison: Dismantling barriers through touch
and handlingJane Samuels, The British Museum.20 The amenable object:
working with diaspora communities through a psychoanalysis of
touchBernadette Lynch.The FutureTouch and the value of object handling:
Final conclusions for a new sensory museologyDevorah Romanek and Bernadette
Lynch.Index
List of IllustrationsList of ContributorsIntroductionHelen ChatterjeePART I
What Do We Mean By Touch?1 Museums, modernity and the class politics of
touching objects Fiona Candlin2 Making sense of touchCharles Spence and
Alberto Gallace3 Emotional touch: A neuroscientific overviewHugo Critchley4
Explorations in exploratory touch: The role of feeling in touching
objectsFrancis McGlonePART II New Technologies for Enhancing Object
Interpretation5 The use of haptic interfaces in haptics researchChristos
Giachritsis6 Tactual explorations: A tactile interpretation of a museum
exhibit through tactile artworks and augmented realityIsil Onol7 CONTACT:
Digital modelling of object and process in artefact teaching Roger Doonan
and Michael Boyd8 Out of touch? Digital technologies, ethnographic objects
and sensory ordersGraeme Were9 A versatile large-scale multimodal VR system
for cultural heritage visualisationCeline Loscos10 Touch technologies and
museum accessRobert Zimmer, Janis Jefferies and Mandayam SrinivasanPART III
Touch and Memory11 A memory for touch: The cognitive psychology of tactile
memoryAlberto Gallace and Charles Spence12 Aesthetics of touch among the
elderlyMichael Rowlands13 Reminiscence: Recent work at The British
MuseumLaura Phillips14 Getting a handle on the past: The use of objects in
reminiscence workBernie ArighoPART IV Therapeutic Approaches to Touch15
Enrichment programmes in hospitals: Using museum loan boxes in University
College London HospitalGuy Noble and Helen Chatterjee16 See, touch and
enjoy: Newham University Hospital's nostalgia room, Jackie O'Sullivan17
Measuring the 'difficult to measure'Caroline SelaiPART V Knowledge Transfer
in Object Handling 18 How accessible are museums today?Marcus Weisen.19 The
British Museum in Pentonville Prison: Dismantling barriers through touch
and handlingJane Samuels, The British Museum.20 The amenable object:
working with diaspora communities through a psychoanalysis of
touchBernadette Lynch.The FutureTouch and the value of object handling:
Final conclusions for a new sensory museologyDevorah Romanek and Bernadette
Lynch.Index
What Do We Mean By Touch?1 Museums, modernity and the class politics of
touching objects Fiona Candlin2 Making sense of touchCharles Spence and
Alberto Gallace3 Emotional touch: A neuroscientific overviewHugo Critchley4
Explorations in exploratory touch: The role of feeling in touching
objectsFrancis McGlonePART II New Technologies for Enhancing Object
Interpretation5 The use of haptic interfaces in haptics researchChristos
Giachritsis6 Tactual explorations: A tactile interpretation of a museum
exhibit through tactile artworks and augmented realityIsil Onol7 CONTACT:
Digital modelling of object and process in artefact teaching Roger Doonan
and Michael Boyd8 Out of touch? Digital technologies, ethnographic objects
and sensory ordersGraeme Were9 A versatile large-scale multimodal VR system
for cultural heritage visualisationCeline Loscos10 Touch technologies and
museum accessRobert Zimmer, Janis Jefferies and Mandayam SrinivasanPART III
Touch and Memory11 A memory for touch: The cognitive psychology of tactile
memoryAlberto Gallace and Charles Spence12 Aesthetics of touch among the
elderlyMichael Rowlands13 Reminiscence: Recent work at The British
MuseumLaura Phillips14 Getting a handle on the past: The use of objects in
reminiscence workBernie ArighoPART IV Therapeutic Approaches to Touch15
Enrichment programmes in hospitals: Using museum loan boxes in University
College London HospitalGuy Noble and Helen Chatterjee16 See, touch and
enjoy: Newham University Hospital's nostalgia room, Jackie O'Sullivan17
Measuring the 'difficult to measure'Caroline SelaiPART V Knowledge Transfer
in Object Handling 18 How accessible are museums today?Marcus Weisen.19 The
British Museum in Pentonville Prison: Dismantling barriers through touch
and handlingJane Samuels, The British Museum.20 The amenable object:
working with diaspora communities through a psychoanalysis of
touchBernadette Lynch.The FutureTouch and the value of object handling:
Final conclusions for a new sensory museologyDevorah Romanek and Bernadette
Lynch.Index