288 pages, 6 x 9
Paperback
Release Date:28 Aug 2020
ISBN:9781625344939
Hardcover
Release Date:16 Jul 2020
ISBN:9781625344922
Museum Diplomacy
Transnational Public History and the U.S. Department of State
University of Massachusetts Press
The Museums Connect program stands at the intersection of transnational public history and international diplomacy. Sponsored by the U.S. Department of State and administered by the American Alliance of Museums, this program partners U.S. museums and non-U.S. museums in projects designed to foster community collaboration and engagement. Museum Diplomacy focuses on three Museums Connect projects arranged between the United States and South Africa, Morocco, and Afghanistan, respectively. Utilizing a diverse range of oral interviews, Richard J. W. Harker explores how museums negotiate national boundaries, institutional and local histories, and post-9/11 geopolitical interests. Working in different political and professional contexts, museum partners have built community-driven collaborative exhibitions and projects that tell transnational stories.
As more historic sites and museums seek to surmount social, cultural, and economic barriers between themselves and their communities in their exhibitions and programming, the Museums Connect program provides important lessons on how to overcome entrenched hierarchies of power in public history.
As more historic sites and museums seek to surmount social, cultural, and economic barriers between themselves and their communities in their exhibitions and programming, the Museums Connect program provides important lessons on how to overcome entrenched hierarchies of power in public history.
[T]oday, as the United States appears poised to enter a renewed era of international relations and public diplomacy, Museum Diplomacy can be read as both a history and a potential guide for future American public history projects overseas.'—Collections
'Museum Diplomacy is highly original because of its focus on transnational public history. There really is nothing like it, which is why it's so valuable to the field.'—Thomas Cauvin, president of the International Federation for Public History and author of Public History: A Textbook of Practice
RICHARD J. W. HARKER is coexecutive director of the Historic Oakland Foundation in Atlanta, Georgia.