Ciliberti, Rosagemma (Author)
Fulcheri, Ezio (Author)
Petralia, Paolo (Author)
Siri, Anna (Author)
Human remains have a unique status within museum collections and raise several multifaceted and complex ethical and legal issues. The personal, cultural, symbolic, spiritual or religious significance they have for individuals and groups bears a particular responsibility on the museums in the way they are acquired, handled, and displayed. Human remains may also have the potential to contribute to the culture and common good, through research, teaching and, in a respectful mode, exhibitions. As a valuable resource, they actively encourage personal and community reflection on humanity’s shared heritage. As protagonists of an historical revision process, scientific collections can play a significant role in challenging prejudices and stereotypes of the past. They may foster the change and promote a deeper understanding of different cultural perspec-tives and practices, supporting equality and inclusion, and encouraging a policy open to participation and discussion on choices, in a close relationship with local communities. In a complex and ever-changing world, museums need to ensure respect for the different ways of interpreting nature and human history by engaging with all stakeholders. This includes ethical issues related to the provenance of objects, acquisition, care, interpretation, display, and request for restitution, as well as a commitment by museums to stimulate constructive debate and consultation among the native people belonging the remains.
...More
Book
Laqueur, Thomas Walter;
(2018)
The Work of the Dead: A Cultural History of Mortal Remains
(/isis/citation/CBB382030565/)
Article
Barbian, Lenore;
Sledzik, Paul;
Reznick, Jeffrey;
(2012)
Remains of War
(/isis/citation/CBB001421579/)
Article
Craske, Matthew;
(2011)
“Unwholesome” and “Pornographic”: A Reassessment of the Place of Rackstrow's Museum in the Story of Eighteenth-Century Anatomical Collection and Exhibition
(/isis/citation/CBB001200259/)
Article
Roque, Ricardo;
(2011)
Stories, Skulls, and Colonial Collections
(/isis/citation/CBB001231592/)
Book
Paul Turnbull;
(2019)
Science, Museums and Collecting the Indigenous Dead in Colonial Australia
(/isis/citation/CBB646252193/)
Article
Rafael Mandressi;
(2016)
Affected Doctors: Dead Bodies and Affective and Professional Cultures in Early Modern European Anatomy
(/isis/citation/CBB302116927/)
Book
Samuel J. Redman;
(2016)
Bone Rooms: From Scientific Racism to Human Prehistory in Museums
(/isis/citation/CBB181840212/)
Article
Kakaliouras, Ann M.;
(2013)
An Anthropology of Repatriation: Contemporary Physical Anthropological and Native American Ontologies of Practice
(/isis/citation/CBB001212638/)
Article
Francesca Monza;
Silvia Iorio;
(2018)
Bodies for science. The display of human statues for educational purposes
(/isis/citation/CBB976027619/)
Article
Qureshi, Sadiah;
(2004)
Displaying Sara Baartman, the “Hottentot Venus”
(/isis/citation/CBB000470286/)
Article
Nicholas Binney;
(2018)
The function of the heart is historically contingent
(/isis/citation/CBB696611235/)
Book
Ferber, Sarah;
Wilde, Sally;
(2011)
The Body Divided: Human Beings and Human “Materials” in Modern Medical History
(/isis/citation/CBB001200121/)
Book
Stephens, Elizabeth;
(2011)
Anatomy as Spectacle: Public Exhibitions of the Body from 1700 to the Present
(/isis/citation/CBB001250854/)
Book
Andrew Graciano;
(2019)
Visualizing the Body in Art, Anatomy, and Medicine since 1800: Models and Modeling
(/isis/citation/CBB806661384/)
Book
Elizabeth T. Hurren;
(2021)
Hidden Histories of the Dead: Disputed Bodies in Modern British Medical Research
(/isis/citation/CBB995981550/)
Article
Canadelli, Elena;
(2011)
“Scientific Peep Show”: The Human Body in Contemporary Science Museums
(/isis/citation/CBB001024828/)
Article
Bates, A. W.;
(2008)
“Indecent and Demoralising Representations”: Public Anatomy Museums in Mid-Victorian England
(/isis/citation/CBB000774856/)
Article
Nicholls, E. Henry;
(2002)
Selling Anatomy: The Role of the Soul
(/isis/citation/CBB000300623/)
Book
Rooy, Laurens de;
Bogaard, Han van den;
(2009)
Verzamelaars van vorm
(/isis/citation/CBB001024398/)
Article
Marianne Klemun;
Marina Loskutova;
Anastasia Fedotova;
(2018)
Skulls and Blossoms: Collecting and the Meaning of Scientific Objects as Resources from the 18th to the 20th Century
(/isis/citation/CBB042290012/)
Be the first to comment!