Article ID: CBB333427386

From Classification to Recreated ‘Reality’: William Bullock's Exhibitions of Human and Natural History (2020)

unapi

In his London Museum (1809), William Bullock organised displays of his animal collections into family and contextual groups within re-creations of their natural surroundings. Subsequently his displays of Saami material re-created its social environment. Bullock’s exhibitions signal a significant moment in the movement from the Linnaean-style classification of natural material by appearance to explanation of it through contextual and inherent qualities. A new kind of meaning was generated, bringing together the natural and the antiquarian in showing that the same approach transformed understanding of both. It shifted emphasis from eighteenth-century natural philosophy towards nineteenth-century science, both natural and human.

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Authors & Contributors
Uwe Albrecht
Mije, S. D. van der
Jansen, J. J. F. J.
Grouw, H. Van
Turnbull, Paul
Schweizer, Claudia
Journals
Archives of Natural History
Journal of the History of Collections
Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences
Historical Records of Australian Science
British Journal for the History of Science
Publishers
Oxford University Press
Manchester University Press
University of Pittsburgh Press
Tectum Verlag
Palgrave Macmillan
Harvard University Press
Concepts
Collectors and collecting
Museums
Natural history
Science and culture
Museum exhibits
Biological specimens
People
Martin, Philipp Leopold
Becker, Lothar
Wellcome, Henry Solomon
Malinowski, Bronislaw
Gould, John
Darwin, Charles Robert
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
20th century, early
18th century
21st century
Places
Great Britain
Australia
Melanesia
Peru
United States
Sweden
Institutions
Hunterian Museum (London)
Naturhistoriska riksmuseet
Royal College of Surgeons, London
Oxford University
Brown University
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