The ‘museumification’ of the Scottish soldier and the meaning-making of Britain’s wars

Q1 Arts and Humanities Critical Military Studies Pub Date : 2020-07-02 DOI:10.1080/23337486.2019.1677042
N. Danilova, Kandida Purnell
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

ABSTRACT Drawing on interviews with curators of Scotland’s military museums and fieldwork ethnographies, this article explores how the Scottish Soldier is enacted through curation and how, through artefacts and stories, curators (re)produce the Scottish Soldier within and through their museums’ spaces. This article identifies three intertwining curatorial practices: (a) Production of a Scottish warrior ‘dreamscape’ through a dual technique of displaying symbolic representations of Scots-as-warriors while simultaneously reframing the controversies of Scotland’s contribution to British colonial wars and recent conflicts; (b) Construction of classed, raced, and gendered hierarchies through the curation of war-informing artefacts (uniforms, medals, and weaponry) – all of which sustain the dominance of warrior-like masculinity deployed in the service of the British state; and (c) Humanization of soldiers via the disruption of stereotypical warrior codes and the making visible of personalized and locally based war stories working towards decontextualisation and sentimentalization of war. We argue that these curatorial practices enable the reproduction of a sacrificial Scottish Soldier and through this process they assist in the normalization of Britain’s wars.
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苏格兰士兵的“博物馆化”和英国战争的意义
摘要本文通过对苏格兰军事博物馆策展人的采访和实地民族志,探讨了《苏格兰士兵》是如何通过策展创作的,以及策展人是如何通过文物和故事在博物馆空间内和通过博物馆空间重新创作《苏格兰兵兵》的。本文确定了三种相互交织的策展实践:(a)通过展示苏格兰人作为战士的象征性表现的双重技术,制作一个苏格兰战士的“梦境”,同时重新构建苏格兰对英国殖民战争和最近冲突的贡献的争议;(b) 通过管理战争宣传文物(制服、奖牌和武器),构建阶级、种族和性别等级制度——所有这些都维持了为英国国家服务的战士般的男子气概的主导地位;(c)通过打破陈规定型的战士守则,使士兵人性化,并使个性化和以当地为基础的战争故事变得明显,努力使战争去文本化和情感化。我们认为,这些策展实践使牺牲的苏格兰士兵得以再现,并通过这一过程帮助英国战争正常化。
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来源期刊
Critical Military Studies
Critical Military Studies Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: Critical Military Studies provides a rigorous, innovative platform for interdisciplinary debate on the operation of military power. It encourages the interrogation and destabilization of often taken-for-granted categories related to the military, militarism and militarization. It especially welcomes original thinking on contradictions and tensions central to the ways in which military institutions and military power work, how such tensions are reproduced within different societies and geopolitical arenas, and within and beyond academic discourse. Contributions on experiences of militarization among groups and individuals, and in hitherto underexplored, perhaps even seemingly ‘non-military’ settings are also encouraged. All submitted manuscripts are subject to initial appraisal by the Editor, and, if found suitable for further consideration, to double-blind peer review by independent, anonymous expert referees. The Journal also includes a non-peer reviewed section, Encounters, showcasing multidisciplinary forms of critique such as film and photography, and engaging with policy debates and activism.
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