Climate change and the museum: decolonizing and decarbonizing parallels and consequences

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Abstract

ABSTRACT: Recent years have seen an increasing prominence of anthropogenic climate change issues within museums. While climate change itself has become a central theme for many exhibitions, some museums are, themselves, under threat from climate change. Within many industrial museums, however, there has been surprisingly little critical self-reflection, leaving themes of climate change both central and unsaid. Developing cases studies of Ironbridge Gorge (Shropshire, UK) and Heartlands (Cornwall, UK), this essay explores how certain museums have celebrated, often uncritically, the capacity for humans to alter the climate. Drawing parallels with how postcolonial theory has prompted critical self-reflection, the article examines how the climate crisis provides an imperative for museums both to explore their role in climate injustice and to seize a critical opportunity to make a contribution towards sustainable decarbonization. The article, therefore, calls for contemporary museum ambitions towards decolonization to be matched by activities that have an ambition towards decarbonization.
Original languageEnglish
JournalMuseum Worlds
Volume11
Pages (from-to)64-78
Number of pages15
ISSN2049-6737
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2023

Keywords

  • KEYWORDS: carbon economy
  • climate change
  • colonialism and decoloniality
  • decarbonization
  • industrial museums

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