Natural history museums preserve a considerable, yet often unacknowledged part of the world’s colonial heritage. Their identity, collections, exhibitions and, importantly, much of their research activities are based on objects which underwent multifold translocations from colonized territories to museums in the Global North. Natural history museums took advantage of colonial endeavours and were deeply entangled in the exploitation of the colonies. However, natural objects are often displayed as ›of Nature‹ – and framed within a narrative of Western scientific accomplishments and rationality. The complex histories of acquisition as well as the political context of the discovery and translocation of objects are thus rendered invisible. The workshop takes the growing tension between the entangled history of natural history museums and colonialism on the one hand and the invisibility of those entanglements on the other as a starting point for considerations about decolonization.
Thursday, September 6, 2018
From 9:00 Registration
9:30-11:00 INTRODUCTION
9:30 Welcome Address
Ina Heumann, Holger Stoecker, Mareike Vennen, Joint research project Dinosaurs in Berlin
10:00 Keynote Lecture: Conquest, Care and the Fossil Complex
Ciraj Rassool, University of the Western Cape
11:00 Break
11:30–13:20 SESSION I: Politics of Presentation
Chair: Patricia Rahemipour, Botanischer Garten und Botanisches Museum Berlin-Dahlem, Freie Universität Berlin
11:30 Decolonizing Botanical Collections
Anna Haebich, Curtin University
12:10 Web-like Analogies as a Decolonizing Order in Natural History Display
Fritha Langerman, University of Cape Town
12:50 Comment: Jonathan Fine, Ethnologisches Museum, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin –Preußischer Kulturbesitz
13:20 Lunch
15:00–16:50 SESSION II: Politics of Participation
Chair: Sybilla Nikolow, Museum für Naturkunde Berlin
15:00 The Natural History Museum and the Pluriverse: Decoloniality at the Periphery
Ayesha Keshani, Goldsmiths, University of London
15:40 Putting Metadata to Work: Modelling Information on Historical Collections of Natural History in Social Justice Contexts
Martha Fleming, British Museum / University of Göttingen, Dominik Hünniger, University of Göttingen
16:20 Comment: Tahani Nadim, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin / Museum für Naturkunde Berlin
16:50 Break
18:30 PANEL DISCUSSION: Koloniales Erbe und Naturkunde
Larissa Förster, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Michael Ohl, Museum für Naturkunde Berlin
Ciraj Rassool, University of the Western Cape
Bénédicte Savoy, Technische Universität Berlin
Chair: Andreas Eckert, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
The panel discussion will be held in German, simultaneous translation will be provided by an interpreter via head phones for the English speaking audience. English discussion contributions are welcome.
Friday, September 7, 2018
9:45 Welcome Address
Johannes Vogel, Museum für Naturkunde Berlin
10:00-12:00 SESSION III: Politics of Objects: Heritage, Property, Responsibility
Chair: Anja Schwarz, Universität Potsdam
10:00 Colonial Collections at Berlin's Botanical Museum
Katja Kaiser, CeNak – Center of Natural History
10:40 Java Man and the Colonial Legacy of Fossil Collections
Caroline Drieenhuizen, Open University of the Netherlands, Fenneke Sysling, Utrecht University
11:20 Comment: Ina Heumann, Museum für Naturkunde Berlin
12:00 Lunch
13:30-15:20 SESSION IV: Museum Practices and Politics
Chair: David Blankenstein, Deutsches Historisches Museum
13:30 Birds from the Colonies at the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin: Backgrounds, Relevance and Development
Sylke Frahnert, Museum für Naturkunde Berlin
14:10 The Natural History Museum in Nigeria: Dynamics and Impact
Lucky Ugbudian, Federal University Ndufu Alike Ikwo
14:50 Comment: Manuela Bauche, Museum für Naturkunde Berlin
15:20 Closing Remarks
The workshop is conceived and organized by the joint project »Dinosaurs in Berlin. Brachiosaurus brancai as an Icon of Politics, Science, and Popular Culture«:
Ina Heumann (PAN – Perspectives on Nature, Museum für Naturkunde Berlin)
Holger Stoecker (Institute for Asian and African Studies, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)
Mareike Vennen (Institut für Kunstwissenschaften und Historische Urbanistik, Technische Universität Berlin)
Funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research
Further information
https://www.museumfuernaturkunde.berlin/en/forschung/leitthemen/dinosaurs-berlin
Contact
Yvonne Reimers
Museum für Naturkunde Berlin, Invalidenstraße 43, 10115 Berlin
Registration (closing date August 30, 2018)
pan@mfn.berlin