“As We Have Always Done”: Decolonizing the Tomaquag Museum’s Collections Management Policy

Lorén Spears, A. Thompson
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

As Executive Director of the Tomaquag Museum, an Indigenous-led organization currently located in Exeter, Rhode Island, Lorén Spears (Narragansett-Niantic) continues the work of reimagining how museums represent and serve Indigenous communities begun by the Indigenous women who held that role before her. Today, we might identify these practices as “decolonizing,” but, to invoke Leanne Betasamosake Simpson (Michi Saagiig Nishnaabeg), it is “as [they] have always done.” For over sixty years, the Tomaquag Museum has engaged Indigenous Belongings from its collection in conjunction with cultural knowledge shared by Indigenous peoples to educate the public on Native history, culture, arts, and Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) of Southern New England. This essay highlights the Tomaquag Museum’s praxis for decolonizing its collections management policy, led by Spears’ intellectual labor. It alternates Spears’ words, excerpted from a conversation with scholar and museum professional Amanda Thompson (non-Native), with selections from the in-progress collections management policy. This format creates a narrative which highlights the history of the museum and its ongoing decolonizing practice and illustrates how policy language can be integral to the work of empowering Native people and transforming museum structures.
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“一如既往”:托玛格博物馆藏品管理政策的非殖民化
作为目前位于罗德岛州埃克塞特的土著领导组织托玛格博物馆的执行主任,洛尔萨姆·斯皮尔斯(纳拉甘塞特-尼安蒂克)继续着重新构想博物馆如何代表和服务土著社区的工作,这一工作是由在她之前担任这一角色的土著妇女开始的。今天,我们可能认为这些做法是“去殖民化”,但是,用Leanne Betasamosake Simpson (Michi Saagiig Nishnaabeg)的话来说,这是“(他们)一直在做的事情”。60多年来,Tomaquag博物馆将其收藏的土著物品与土著人民分享的文化知识结合起来,向公众宣传新英格兰南部的土著历史、文化、艺术和传统生态知识(TEK)。本文重点介绍了以斯皮尔斯的智力劳动为主导的托玛格博物馆藏品管理政策的非殖民化实践。这段话摘自斯皮尔斯与学者和博物馆专业人士阿曼达·汤普森(非本地人)的谈话,其中一些话摘自正在进行的藏品管理政策。这种形式创造了一种叙事方式,突出了博物馆的历史及其正在进行的非殖民化实践,并说明了政策语言如何能够融入赋予土著人民权力和改造博物馆结构的工作中。
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