Uncertainty as Affective State and Critical Engagement Strategy in Museum and Heritage Site Settings

L. Wallén, John R. Docherty-Hughes
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Abstract

Some pasts have long been uncertain—among those, prehistoric lives in areas where limited archaeological evidence has been unearthed. The Scottish Crannog Centre holds a collection of Iron Age artifacts that have been excavated from the bottom of Loch Tay, jigsaw pieces that are used to tell the story of the everyday lives of crannog dwellers two and a half thousand years ago. The visitor experience at the museum is built on direct interaction with the museum team as the visitors are guided through the site, presenting ample opportunities for critical questions to be raised and discussed about how the past can be understood in the present and how it can inform the future. Facilitating such conversations—and using Iron Age artifacts as points of connection and as conversational prompts—involves a careful balance between fact, interpretation, and imagination; what we know for certain, what is likely, and what we do not, and cannot, know. This paper focuses on how Scottish Crannog Centre museum practitioners employ uncertainty as a feeling, a process, and an engagement strategy in generating critical reflections and conversations among visitors. Drawing on data generated through twenty-five interviews with museum staff, apprentices, and volunteers, as well as ethnographic observations, we explore how the team manages uncertainty, how it is positioned and functions in interactions with visitors, and how uncertainty facilitates a sense of connection to the distant past. In so doing, we argue that uncertainty can be more clearly conceptualized as an affective state and a critical strategy when exploring how prehistoric and present-day life are connected in museum contexts.
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不确定性作为博物馆和遗址设置中的情感状态和关键参与策略
有些过去一直是不确定的——其中,史前生活在考古证据有限的地区。苏格兰克兰诺格中心收藏了从泰湖底挖掘出来的铁器时代的文物,这些拼图碎片用来讲述2500年前克兰诺格居民的日常生活故事。游客在博物馆的体验是建立在与博物馆团队的直接互动上的,因为游客在现场被引导,为提出和讨论关于如何在现在理解过去以及如何通知未来的关键问题提供了充足的机会。促进这样的对话——使用铁器时代的文物作为连接点和对话提示——需要在事实、解释和想象之间取得谨慎的平衡;哪些是我们确定知道的,哪些是可能知道的,哪些是我们不知道的,也不可能知道的。本文关注苏格兰克兰诺格中心博物馆从业者如何将不确定性作为一种感觉、一个过程和一种参与策略,在游客之间产生批判性反思和对话。通过对博物馆工作人员、学徒和志愿者的25次访谈以及民族志观察产生的数据,我们探索了团队如何管理不确定性,它如何定位和与游客互动,以及不确定性如何促进与遥远过去的联系感。在这样做的过程中,我们认为,当探索史前和现代生活如何在博物馆环境中联系起来时,不确定性可以更清楚地概念化为一种情感状态和一种关键策略。
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