When considering cultures in collision a museum is a fine example of a clash of positives and negatives. This can be a troubling idea for the curators and visitors of museums because their collective pursuit of further cultural knowledge is often pure. However, in constructing a museum more often than not items of important significance are transplanted from their original location to be viewed and studied by a foreign people in a foreign land. The concept of the “rightful owners” of history and artifacts is a complicated one that leads to many cultural collisions. This is because multiple cultures often lay claim to the same artifacts leading to conflict among the claimants. With all of these ideas in mind the process of selecting a piece of art from the Cornell Fine Arts Museum for analysis became far more difficult. In examining the thought-provoking piece Lonesome George by Juan Travieso a warning message is telegraphed loud and clear.…
In Amy Lonetree’s book, Decolonizing Museums: Representing Native America in National and Tribal Museums, analyzes Native American museums and how they interpret the difficult history of colonization in American museums. She uses the three examples of the Mille Lacs Indian Museum, the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian, and Ziibiwing Center of Anishinabe Culture and Lifeways to demonstrate the partial success, failure, and ongoing triumph of the museums.…
This features and the museums’ distance from their local communities in culture and atmosphere can make many potential visitor feel that the space is not one for them. Museums in some communities virtual empty of locales because they have no hand or investment of any kind in it. However, by giving the public the opportunity to be actively involved the museum’s activities, a museum becomes relevant and meaningful to their communities. A good example of this can be seen in the Oakland Museum of California (OMCA), mentioned in McLean’s “Whose Questions, Whose Conversations?”. This museum has reworked itself into a places important to its community by welcoming local teenagers to co-curate an exhibit in its Gallery of California Art in 2009, called Cool Remixed. By getting these local teens involved in the creation of the exhibit, they not only made the exhibit, and hence the museum, mean something to them, their families and their friends, but also communicated to all the public that the museum is a welcoming…
The president of Yellow country has great responsibilities and must have integrity to lead a complex society. People of Springfield count on the future president to take a step forward and transform their communities into the best and safest environment possible. Yellow People expect the president to take a stand to help make better laws that help protect their rights. Lisa Simpson is the most outstanding person of Springfield. She is a well known trustworthy individual that never fails to satisfy the people around her. At her young age, she has proven to be brilliant and one of the most passionate on issues about the environment. Beyond all her qualities she knows how to be a leader; Yellow country desperately needs a leader like her. Lisa…
Museums bring history and culture to life by allowing individuals to gain unique hands on experience that is different from learning from textbooks or television. One can never know the reality behind certain artifacts and art until they see it for themselves. The perception of viewing a multitude of replicas and pictures such as the Mona Lisa can be dramatically different from witnessing the painting up close. The interactive experience allows one to engage and immerse ourselves back into time to learn about the truth of different cultures and traditions. The intent of museums is not purely to enthrall historians and scholars, but to create an environment which is welcoming to all individuals. While historians argue that museums…
Museums are a perfect way to represent what history has unfolded for the public’s eye. Consideration needs to be made when a person is shopping for fragments of history such as arts or artifacts. A main consideration is profit; however, there are consequences if the museums does not make enough money. If a museum does not make enough money, this could suggest that people are not interested in taking tours throughout the museums anymore,the new age of technology is taking over. What happens after the museums cannot keep their wonderful art?…
Cited: Cuno, James, “Museums, Antiquities, Cultural Property, and the US Legal Framework for Making Acquisitions,” in Who Owns The Past Cultural Policy, Cultural Property, and The Law, ed. Kate Fitz Gibbon. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2005.…
The Simpsons are one of the longest running and most popular television shows. This popularity exists because "the Simpsons [have] always operated on two levels. On one level appealing to children as a fast paced cartoon and then for the older audiences for its wit and [satire]" (Batscha). Satire is the common thread with binds all of The Simpsons episodes. The writers show the absurdity in ordinary everyday situations including religion, politics and other social issues. This has been the leading cause for its controversy and longevity. However, the Simpsons' crude style is necessary and meant to induce anger. The public school system is one of the most common targets of satire.…
A method of critiquing colonial dominance within museums, is critical museology. Shelley Butler uses critical museology to argue against a colonial politics of domination in museums. Butler argues that colonial museums were both ‘silent, and silencing’ (Butler, 2000, p.76). Colonial museums were silencing as they subjected the artefacts to a Western gaze, only artefacts deemed visual interesting were to be shown. The lack of contextualisation of these artefacts meant that they became art for viewing, not for understanding. Svetlana Alpers creates a theory for the lack of contextualisation, naming it the ‘museum-effect’. The museum-effect is ‘the tendency to isolate something from its world, to offer it up for attentive looking and thus to transform it into art’ (Alpers, 1991, p.27). By privileging viewing the object in this way, colonial museums began to enforce the idea of the museum as a space for seeing, or, ‘a space of the 'do not touch’.’ (Hetherington, 2000, p.451). Not only has the idea of the museum as a space in which touch is disallowed been carried through to post-colonial museums, so too has the museum…
ADHD, also known as Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder is a neurological disorder. It is usually present from childhood and causes symptoms such as hyperactivity, poor impulse control, forgetfulness and distractibility. Bart Simpson, the eldest of the Simpsons’ family displayed signs of ADHD. His symptoms were shown though out the episode, especially in the starting. First evidence was shown when principle Skinner is telling Bart about the firefighting equipment and Bart, distractedly, asks about each of them, one after another. He also doesn’t listen to what the principle was telling him thus displaying one of the signs of ADHD. Second evidence was when Bart floods the school gymnasium without regard for the consequences he will have to go though thus showing another sign. The third evidence is of Bart talking non-stop about anything; this is a major sign of ADHD. Lastly, the patterns shown by principle Skinner show that Bart gets distracted easily by anything around him, thus causing those around him to get lower grades. This mental illness is very common in students these days and is better if caught early as medication can help cure it.…
The Simpsons is a popular, prime-time, animated comedy program. Those who have never seen the program may dismiss it as being merely a children's show. That assumption could be made of many animated programs. However, those non-viewers are likely unaware that The Simpsons is a very cleverly written show. The humor in the show is written with various aspects that appeal to different segments of the audience. The characters are written in such a way that many people can relate to one or more of the characters. These factors allow the program to appeal to the large segments of the public in different ways.…
The temple of art residing over the city of Los Angeles has been called “pretencioso” by my family members. I have a dissenting opinion: scattered throughout the galleries of The J. Paul Getty Museum are childhood memories and Gainsborough’s that belong only to me, despite the fact they are viewed by hundreds daily. My affection for the Getty is fueled by these memories, its spectacular collection, and visiting exhibits. I would feel privileged to work in its education department.…
This paper is giving me a chance to write about my favorite show of all time. I am a very big fan of The Simpsons and have always wondered if some of the characters had some kind of personality disorders until now. After reading the information in the book and in the lectures I have come to understand exactly what kind of personality disorders are being portrayed in the show. I am writing this based on the movie and not one of the shows.…
In the chapter Thus Spake Bart: On Nietzsche and the Virtues of Being Bad, Mark T. Conard shows us why people believe Bart Simpson is similar to a philosophical theorist named Friedrich Nietzsche. Bart being the bad boy of the Simpson's and Nietzsche being the bad boy of Philosophy. Conard says that Bart does not take on the chaos like Nietzsche says but he is just an empty being of bad actions. This argument is ridiculous; Bart Simpson is as creative as creative gets.…
The Simpsons has been a cultural phenomenon since its appearance as animated sketches on the Tracy Ullman show in 1987.According to Jason Mittell Simpsons is an alleged embodiment of postmodernism and representative of the post-Fordist area.(Mittell,2001).The series itself revolves around a family of average Americans, each character representing an exaggerated version of his own family members. In three articles three authors have managed to look at the show in three different ways which are the concept of family, The genre and the sense of humor and the correlation between the simpsons and popular culture…