Colonial Objects in Early Modern Sweden and Beyond : : From the Kunstkammer to the Current Museum Crisis / / Mårten Snickare.

An elaborately crafted and decorated tomahawk from somewhere along the north American east coast: how did it end up in the royal collections in Stockholm in the late seventeenth century? What does it say about the Swedish kingdom’s colonial ambitions and desires? What questions does it raise from it...

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Place / Publishing House:Amsterdam : : Amsterdam University Press,, [2022]
©2022
Year of Publication:2022
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Series:Visual and material culture, 1300-1700
Physical Description:1 online resource (216 p.)
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Other title:Frontmatter --
Table of Contents --
List of Illustrations --
Acknowledgements --
Introduction: The King's Tomahawk? --
Part I Colonial Objects in Space: Baroque Practices of Collecting and Display --
1. The Spaces of Colonial Objects : The Colonial World and the Kunstkammer --
2. Global Interests: Colonial Policy and Collecting in the Reign of Queen Christina --
3. Performing Difference: Court Culture and Collecting in the Time of Hedwig Eleonora --
4. Object Lessons: Materiality and Knowledge in the Kunstkammer of Johannes Schefferus --
Part II Colonial Objects in Time: Object Itineraries --
5. Objects and their Agency and Itineraries --
6. From North America to Nordamerika: A Tomahawk --
7. From Northern Sápmi to Nordiska Museet: A Goavddis --
Part III The Fate of Colonial Objects: Pasts, Presents, and Futures --
8. Learning from the Kunstkammer? Colonial Objects and Decolonial Options --
Bibliography --
About the Author --
Index
Summary:An elaborately crafted and decorated tomahawk from somewhere along the north American east coast: how did it end up in the royal collections in Stockholm in the late seventeenth century? What does it say about the Swedish kingdom’s colonial ambitions and desires? What questions does it raise from its present place in a display cabinet in the Museum of Ethnography in Stockholm? This book is about the tomahawk and other objects like it, acquired in colonial contact zones and displayed by Swedish elites in the seventeenth century. Its first part situates the objects in two distinct but related spaces: the expanding space of the colonial world, and the exclusive space of the Kunstkammer. The second part traces the objects’ physical and epistemological transfer from the Kunstkammer to the modern museum system. In the final part, colonial objects are considered at the centre of a heated debate over the present state of museums, and their possible futures.
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: Mårten Snickare.