Arnold, Ken (Author)
Taking its cue from this special issue on the interweaving of different types of time through science and museum collections, this epilogue gives an overview of what sorts of new insights seem possible when different temporal qualities embedded in all collections are allowed to come together? What can we learn from juxtaposing the timings of museums, laboratories, and clinics? Can they lead to better understands of the processes of decay, and the potential for reanimation, inherent in all museum objects?
...MoreArticle Martin Grünfeld; Karin Tybjerg (2023) Collections, Knowledge, and Time. Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology (pp. 213-234).
Article
Tiziana N. Beltrame;
(2023)
A Matter of Dust, Powdery Fragments, and Insects. Object Temporalities Grounded in Social and Material Museum Life
Article
Adrian Van Allen;
(2023)
Entangled Timelines. Crafting Types of Time Through Making Museum Specimens
Article
Martin Grünfeld;
Adam Bencard;
Louise Whiteley;
(2023)
From Mausoleum to Living Room. Practicing Metabolic Carpentry in the Museum
Article
Martin Grünfeld;
Karin Tybjerg;
(2023)
Collections, Knowledge, and Time
Article
Schmidgen, Henning;
(2013)
Between the Laboratory and the Museum: Claude Bernard and the Problem of Time
Article
Mitman, Gregg;
(2003)
Natural History and the Clinic: The Regional Ecology of Allergy in America
Article
Helene Scott-Fordsmand;
Karin Tybjerg;
(2023)
Approaching diagnostic messiness through spiderweb strategies: Connecting epistemic practices in the clinic and the laboratory
Book
Mike (Michael Alastair) Jones;
(2022)
Artefacts, archives, and documentation in the relational museum
Article
Lutz Strobach;
(2024)
Museumsobjekte als Sachquelle. Die Verwendung von Eisen- werkstoff en zum Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts in militärischen Anlagen am Beispiel zweier Objekte aus der Sammlung des Militärhistorischen Museums (MHM); (Museum objects as material sources. The use of iron materials at the end of the 19th century in military facilities using the example of two objects from the collection of the Military History Museum (MHM))
Article
Xan Sarah Chacko;
Jenny Bangham;
(2023)
Lively Stasis. Care and Routine in Living Collections of Flies and Seeds
Article
Boris Jardine;
Joshua Nall;
(2023)
The Lab in the Museum. Or, Using New Scientific Instruments to Look at Old Scientific Instruments
Chapter
Fanny Kieffer;
(2014)
The Laboratories of Art and Alchemy at the Uffizi Gallery in Renaissance Florence: Some Material Aspects
Article
Lisa Lafontaine;
(2022)
L’introduction de la photographie dans les laboratoires du Muséum au XIXe siècle: Un nouvel outil dans les pratiques scientifiques
Article
Joeri Bruyninckx;
(September 2017)
Synchronicity: Time, Technicians, Instruments, and Invisible Repair
Article
Frédéric Keck;
(2023)
Filling China’s Gaps. Viral Banks and Bird Collections as Museums for Pandemics
Article
James M. Edmonson;
(2019)
Artifacts of the Neurosciences: A Resource Guide to Museums and Collections
Article
Laura Colli;
Antonella Salvini;
Elena Pecchioni;
Sandra Cencetti;
(2017)
Conservation of Paleontological Finds: the Restoration Materials of the “Problematica Verrucana”
Article
Lucia Borrelli;
Mariailaria Verderame;
(2021)
Malformed skulls from criminal Anthropology: a preliminary study on the Cranioteca of the Anthropology Museum of Naples
Article
Annarita Franza;
Carmela Petti;
Giovanni Pratesi;
(2021)
More than just a rock collection. The meteorite collection of the Italian geologist Teodoro Monticelli (1759–1845)
Chapter
Warren D. Allmon;
Gregory P. Dietl;
Jonathan R. Hendricks;
Robert M. Ross;
(2018)
Bridging the two fossil records: Paleontology’s “big data” future resides in museum collections
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