Drawing on the author's extensive experience working with collections across the world, Geismar argues for an understanding of digital media as material, rather than immaterial, and advocates for a more nuanced, ethnographic and historicised view of museum digitisation projects than those usually adopted in the celebratory accounts of new media in museums. By locating the digital as part of a longer history of material engagements, transformations and processes of translation, this book broadens our understanding of the reality effects that digital technologies create, and of how digital media can be mobilised in different parts of the world to very different effects.
Praise for Museum Object Lessons for a Digital Age
'In Museum Object Lessons for the Digital Age, Haidy Geismar presents a slim, thoughtful volume that explores today's museums as settings that bridge traditional analogue and innovative digital experiences. It is accessibly written and relevant to those thinking critically about the shifting potentials of material culture and heritage in our contemporary world....These case studies are really about how the physical - analogue, experienced things and settings - can be used to think critically about the virtual. Via personal reflections drawn from a career in museum anthropology, Geismar 'explores the interface of digital and analogue media within museum practices and technologies' (p. xv).
Post-Medieval Archaeology
'The subject of this small volume is of general importance for art museums and art history.'
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