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ISBN
978-89-285-0940-9 (94380)
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¹Ú¹°°üÀÇ Àü½Ã´Â ÁÖÁ¦¸¦ ±¸»óÇÏ¿©, ½Ç¹°ÀÇ ¼±ÅÃ, ¹è¿, Àå½ÄÀ¸·Î ÀÌ·ç¾îÁö´Â ÀÏÁ¾ÀÇ ¿ª»ç¼¼úÀÌ´Ù. ¹Ú¹°°üÀÇ Àü½Ã¿¡¼ ¿ª »çÁö½ÄÀÌ ¾î¶»°Ô ºú¾îÁö´Â°¡. Áö½ÄÀÇ Á¶Çü(Shaping Knowledge)Àº Áö½ÄÀÇ Ã¢Á¶¿Í´Â ´Ù¸£´Ù. Áö½ÄÀÇ Á¶ÇüÀº »ç¹°µé¿¡ Â÷À̼ºÀ̳ª µ¿ÀϼºÀ» ºÎ¿©ÇÏ¿© ºÐ·ùÇÔÀ¸·Î¼ ºú¾îÁø ½Ã¼±°ú ´ã·ÐÀÌ´Ù. À¯¹°ÀÇ Àü½Ã¿¡¼ ¹«¾ùÀÌ Àü½ÃµÇ¾ú´Â°¡¸¦ µûÁö´Â °ÍÀÌ ÀÏÂ÷ÀûÀ¸·Î ÇÊ¿äÇÑ ÀÛ¾÷ÀÌÁö¸¸, ¹«¾ùÀÌ Àü½ÃµÇÁö ¾Ê¾Ò´Â°¡ ÇÏ´Â Á¡µµ ¹®Á¦ÀûÀÌ´Ù. À̶§ Áö¹æ»ç, ±¹°¡»ç, Áö¿ª»çÀÇ ¹èÄ¡¿Í Á¶ÇÕ¿¡ ´ëÇÑ Áú¹®ÀÌ ÈµÎÀÇ ÇϳªÀÌ´Ù.
Abstract
The visual shaping of historical knowledge:
The history of Museum & exhibition in East Asia
The exhibition at a museum is a describing history thorough selection of the object, the array, and decoration. The first and foremost goal of this research is how the visual object is turned into and shapes the knowledge of history by examining the history of East Asia museums and their exhibition. The concept of creating knowledge is different to that of shaping it. Creating knowledge means that something is replaced by new theory and philosophy, whereas the shaping knowledge focuses on the differences and similarities of objects and groups objects in order of intentions, and arranges the classified objects systematically, so we can call it a ¡®gaze and discourse¡¯ by the order of signifier. The research of the history and display of museums is the process of analyzing the question of why they decided on the necessity of the museum and how a nation recalls or removes, chooses or excludes, classifies or orders objects. This book is intended to reveal another historiography created outside of the academy of history. Fifteen national museums and a private museum in East Asia are analyzed through this study. The first chapter tells about the birth of museums in the capital city of each country. The second chapter focuses on the relationship between politics and museum display. The last chapter deals with the local museum. Throughout this analysis, each period of the birth, development and specialization of the museum is characterized by modernity, politics and locality by corresponding it to the period of imperialism, the cold war and post-cold war.
The first chapter studies what kind of elements shapes the knowledge of history at the birth of an East Asia museum. The similarity among museums was the contradictory character of the civilization and tradition. This originated from the institution of museum itself because the museum as a modern institution was transplanted from Europe into East Asia to collect traditional culture. Historical knowledge on display in museums was constituted with combinations of five characters which are nationality, locality, modernity, coloniality, and artistry. No museum can help but have modernity since the museum itself is a modern system. Tokyo Imperial Museum represented nationality in that it tried the building of imperial history which includes colonies. In early times, Tokyo Imperial Museum pursued modernity and artistry, however, it concentrated on artistry over modernity later. It was the Taiwan Governor Museum that extremely represented coloniality, without considering artistry, primary focusing on locality. Government General Museum of Chosun could not be an exception to having features of coloniality, but it also needs to recognize that local artistry was accentuated all over the exhibitions.
The National History Museum in Beijing attempted to represent nationality after establishment of the Nanjing government in the mid-1920s and modernity stands out throughout the display and analysis of relics. The locality of Beijing is expressed by the Forbidden City. Unlike the national palace museum, the artistry is a secondary consideration in the National History Museum. Given that coloniality comes from colony in the perspective of politics, this Chinese museum does not have any connection to coloniality. The difference between museums in Japan and China is that the former originated from exposition but the latter one was unrelated. The case of Nantong museum¡¯s display tells us even if the museum was transplanted from Europe into East Asia, when shaping historical knowledge, it was not a mere duplication of Europe but modernized the natural history knowledge in tradition(ÚÏÚªùÊ).
The second chapter focuses on politics during the era of cold war. The Chinese cultural renaissance movement(ñéü¤ÙþûùÜÖýéê¡ÔÑ) in 1960¡¯-1970¡¯ was one part of shaping the culture of cold war. However, there were a few changes in exhibitions at the three museums because they were there for education for the justification of the Nationalist Party or anticommunist campaign before the Chinese culture renaissance movement. The Taiwan Provincial Museum(àýØ¡ÓæؽÚÏڪν) whose main relics come from the Japanese Colonial period mainly displayed the history of nature. The National Museum of History(ÏÐØ¡æ¸ÞÈÚÏڪν) based on the excavation of mainland China shows Chinese tradition and modern art. The National Palace Museum(ͺÏàÚÏÚªêÂ) originating from the treasures of the Qing Dynasty has been exhibiting the national treasure of art. So the Taiwan Provincial Museum established itself as national history museum. The National Museum of History established itself as national gallery in addition to Chinese tradition and The National Palace Museum established itself as the Mecca of Chinese art. These meant even with the exhibitions of museums following requests of authorities in front of demanding political power they did not respond immediately. The collection of museums acted as the primary role in the exhibition of museums.
In contrast to the museum in Taiwan, the Resist America aid Korea memorial hall(ù÷Ú¸êµðÈѺҷν) is indicated to be directly a museum of politics. The Resist America aid Korea memorial hall was built in 1993, four decades after the end of the Korea war, is a memorial for several hundreds of thousands of victims. The time when the museum was to be built related to domestic politics in China, waiting until the honor of Peng DeHuai(ø°Óìüã) had been restored. He had been the captain general of the ¡°Resist America aid Korea War¡±. And the museum was needed for reinforcing patriotism instead of socialism propaganda in 1990¡¯. The resist America aid Korea memorial hall is located on the summit of a small mountain where the memorial tower can maximize the height of location. The statue of Peng DeHuai and Mao Zedong placed at the entrance demonstrates the political situation of the figures. The exhibition of the Resist America aid Korea memorial hall primary emphasizes that the Korean War was fighting against the aggression of America and achieving China¡¯s victory. Also, there is no display of the Korean army even they were one of the main enemies of the Chinese.
The exhibition of The National Museum of Korean Contemporary History (ÓÞùÛÚÅÏÐæ¸ÞÈÚÏڪν) is a prime example of the political conflict. Even though the cold war was over, the main concept of the exhibition was not free from the perspective of the era of the cold war. Before the construction of the museum, there was an argument between the conservatives and progressives. Both opinions seemed confrontational but the logical grammar was isomorphically similar. Key concepts of Urban History Museums¡¯exhibition mainly focus on the nostalgia, sentimentalism, and romance. These concepts show that the Museum no longer plays the distinct role (¡°La Distintion¡±) as the cultural capital but has changed to be a public forum for political conflicts. But It should be pointed out that the key concepts on the exhibition of contemporary history politically induce visitors to the conservative side.
Chapter 3 primarily discusses locality of the museum. Kyushu National Museum (Îúñ¶ÏÐØ¡ÚÏڪν) mainly dealt with Japanese history as a cultural exchange with other countries in Asia. The display of Kyushu National Museum is compound of the local history, national history, and regional history. Kyushu National Museum foreshadows the future of the 21st century museum which is different from that of the 20th century. The exhibition of Kyushu National Museum stays around National history, focusing on the locality of Kyushu and aiming to expand the boundary to Asia. The experts and local citizens all joined forces to establish the Museum. The motif of the exhibition representing ¡°resonance¡± is designed to give a taste of the perspective of Asia. In terms of ocean, however, there is no such thing as the exhibition of drifting record(ø÷úÖâ), Wako(èÞϨ). There is no display on the cultural exchange in modern times. The cultural exchanges in modern times have been far more active than pre-modern times. In modern times the culture exchange and conflict were amid extremely unbalancing powers like warfare. The research on the cultural exchange in the historical academy of Japan usually concentrates on pre-modern times rather than modern times, it can be presumed the historical academy of Japan is trying to avoid the culture conflict originating from the unbalanced power between countries. Maybe these research trends are reflected in the exhibition of Kyushu National Museum.
Hong Kong has issued identity with respect to ¡°who are we?¡± since 1908¡¯–Are we Chinese, Hongkonger in China or Hongkonger? However, the memory of past times was named and spoken as a ¡°story¡±, not ¡°history¡± in Hong Kong. The permanent exhibition in the Hong Kong Museum of History entitled ¡®the story of Hong Kong¡¯ is intentionally fragmented and fluid in terms of identity. Namely, it highlights anti-colonialism on the one hand and modernity on the other hand. The former discourse was based on the documentary and drama of CCTV, the latter one dealt more with poetry, novels, and movies produced in Hong Kong. The key point to remember is that the permanent exhibition of the Hong Kong museum of History entitled ¡°the story of Hong Kong¡± unintentionally reveals the locality. The microscopic private history, episodes, relic are placed as the fragmented story on the matrix of history.
In terms of locality, the Korea National Maritime Museum(ÏÐØ¡úåÇÚÏڪν) in the city of Busan can be compared to the above mentioned museums. The Korea National Maritime Museum aimed to build a comprehensive maritime museum. The main organizers for establishing the museum were local government, central government, and the society of maritime industry but there was no participation from the local community. There were two main issues for the establishment project of the museum. Why did the museum need to be established by the state? Why must the museum be located in the city of Busan? The logic of response was the museum was needed for developing a strong maritime country, and Busan should be the sea capital city. Both reasons are based on the idea of nationality. However, having the museum placed in Busan neglects the importance of locality.
Usually, the term ¡°ism¡± illustrates vivid values and aim of an idea. On the contrary, ¡°-lity¡± at the museum exhibition like nationality reveals features of knowledge as the result of display. The display selected among collections of cultural assets is intentionally or unintentionally reflected by the trend of politics, ideas, habitus of the period. Historical knowledge is shaped by visual express polysemous ¡°-ity¡± rather than a singular meaning of ¡°-ism¡±. The birth and development of Museums in East Asia was a process to institutionalize visual knowledge thorough the real object. That is one of the main reasons for existence of the museum until now. The difference of shaping historical knowledge in contrast to creating historical knowledge arises from how the main media communicate knowledge through visual contents such as photographs, diorama, and the real object. It can be made an interpretation of real object or photographs by seeing it as having multiple meanings and polyphony like visual language in general.
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Abstract
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Introduction: The viewpoint and method to study the museum in East Asia
PART 1. The modernity of museums£The birth of museums in the imperial period
Chapter 1. Tokyo Imperial Museum(ÔÔÌÈð¨ãøÚÏڪν): Beginning of the Museum in East Asia
1. From the exposition to the museum
2. The European museum as role model
3. Collecting relics and establishment of the cultural property preservation law
Chapter 2. The Taiwan Governor Museum(ÓæؽõÅԽݤÚÏڪν): Representation of coloniality
1. The publicity of the new territory and government achievements
2. Display, colonialism and collection of specimens
Chapter 3. Yi Wang Ga museum(ì°èÝÊ«ÚÏڪν) and
The Government General Museum of Chosun(ðÈàØõÅԽݤÚÏڪν): Historicized artistry
1. Collecting and displaying of artistic handicrafts
2. The overheated history
Chapter 4. The National History Museum(ÏÐØ¡ÕöÞÈÚÏڪν)
: Attempt to build national museum in China and checkered past
1. Beijing(ÝÁÌÈ) and Beiping(ÝÁøÁ): The location of The National History Museum
2. The National History Museum in the Forbidden City
3. Collection and displaying of relics
Semi-conclusion: Multi-component historical knowledge
Chapter 5. Nantong Museum(Ñõ÷×ÚÏÚªê½):Modernizing the natural history knowledge in tradition(ÚÏÚªùÊ)
1. Genuine article and institutionalize visual knowledge
2. The spirit of the age in collection and classification
3. The classification of the humanity knowledge
4. Transform the natural history knowledge in tradition
PART 2. Politics of Museums£The culture of cold war and the museum
Chapter 1. The cold war and the museum in Taiwan: The culture of cold war and the collection of the museum
1. Taiwan Provincial Museum(àýØ¡ÓæؽÚÏڪν)
2. The National Museum of History(ÏÐØ¡æ¸ÞÈÚÏڪν)
3. The National Palace Museum(ͺÏàÚÏÚªêÂ)
Chapter 2. Resist America Aid Korea Memorial Hall(ù÷Ú¸êµðÈѺҷν): Politics of timing and location
1. Prayer for the souls of fallen soldiers£Resist America and aiding Korea memorial martyr¡¯s
cemetery(ù÷Ú¸êµðÈÖÞÍ×Õ园)
2. The time of establishment and choice of location
3. Exonerating the hero and description of the history
Chapter 3. The National Museum of Korean Contemporary History(ÓÞùÛÚÅÏÐæ¸ÞÈÚÏڪν) and
Urban History Museums: Topography of ideology
1. The dispute over the display in the National Museum of Korean Contemporary History
2. Displaying of modern history in Urban History Museums
3. Nostalgia, Sentimentalism, Romanticism
PART 3. Locality in Museums£Antagonism between the state and locality£
Chapter 1. Kyushu National Museum(Îúñ¶ÏÐØ¡ÚÏڪν): Exhibition of East Asian History in the Museum
1. National history, local history, regional history in the museum
2. Cultural Exchange Exhibition-¡°Sea Road, Asian Route¡±
3. Absence and disproportion
Chapter 2. Permanent Exhibition in Hong Kong Museum of History
1. From prehistoric Hong Kong to imperial era
2. Displaying ethnic Hong Kong and after the Opium Wars
3. After the modern metropolis period
Chapter 3. The Korea National Maritime Museum(ÏÐØ¡úåÇÚÏڪν)
: Critical approach to the project of establishment
1. Who took the initiative to establish the Maritime Museum
2. The Logic of establishing and locating the National Museum in Busan
3. The theme and plan of display
Conclusion: The visual shaping of historical knowledge
ABSTRACT
Çϼ¼ºÀ ùÁá¦Üó Ha, Sae Bong
ºÎ»ê´ëÇб³ »çÇаú¿¡¼ ¡¸1910~30³â´ë ß¾ú3´ë±â¾÷»ç ¿¬±¸¡¹(1994)·Î ¹Ú»ç ÇÐÀ§¸¦ ÃëµæÇß´Ù. ºÎ»ê´ë, µ¿ÀÇ´ë, ºÎ°æ´ë µî¿¡¼ °»ç ȤÀº ¿¬±¸¿øÀ¸·Î È°µ¿Çß°í ÇöÀç Çѱ¹Çؾç´ëÇб³ µ¿¾Æ½Ã¾ÆÇаú¿¡ ÀçÁ÷ÇÏ°í ÀÖ´Ù. ÔÔÌÈÓÞùÊ ÔÔåÇÙþûùæÚϼᶠ¿Ü±¹Àבּ¸¿ø, Óæؽ ñéäçæÚϼê ÓæؽÞÈæÚϼá¶, ß¾úÞäüåΡùÊêÂ, National Maritime Museum(¿µ±¹), ñéߣÓÞùÊ ä¬÷¼æÚϼá¶, ÜÖÓ©ÓÞùÊ æ¸ÞÈò¢×âæÚϼᶠµî¿¡¼ ¹æ¹®ÇÐÀÚ·Î ¿¬±¸¸¦ ¼öÇàÇÑ ¹Ù ÀÖ´Ù.
10¿© ³â µ¿¾È Áß±¹±Ù´ë °æÁ¦»ç¸¦ ¿¬±¸ÇÏ´Ù°¡, ¡®µ¿¾Æ½Ã¾Æ¡¯¶ó´Â ½Ã°¢À¸·Î Áß±¹ ±ÙÇö´ë»ç¿¡¼ µ¿¾Æ½Ã¾Æ ±ÙÇö´ë»ç·Î ¿¬±¸¿µ¿ªÀ» È®ÀåÇß´Ù. ¡°µ¿¾Æ½Ã¾Æ¡±¶ó´Â °üÁ¡¿¡¼ ¹«¿ª, ±¤°í, ¹Ú¶÷ȸ, ¹Ú¹°°üÀ» ¼ÒÀç·Î ¿¬±¸ÇÏ´Â ÇÑÆí, Çѱ¹À» ºñ·ÔÇÑ µ¿¾Æ½Ã¾Æ Çа迡¼ »ý»êµÇ´Â ¿ª»çÇÐ Áö½ÄÀÇ Á¸Àç¹æ½Ä¿¡ ´ëÇÏ¿© °í ¹ÎÇÏ°í ÀÖ´Ù.
ÁÖ¿äÀú¼·Î ¡ºµ¿¾Æ½Ã¾Æ ¿ª»çÇÐÀÇ »ý»ê°ú À¯Åë¡»(2001)°ú °øÀú·Î ¡ºÔÔä¬ùÓÙþûùÏêæ¨ñéÏÐμͧ¡»(2005), ¡ºìíÜâªÎãÕÚÅò¢ò¨ÛÕªÎãù÷¾ªÈΦËÛªÎôèß©¡»(2010), ¡ºúåÇ, ùûÏ¢àòã¼, ÜÙò¢¡»(2014) µîÀÌ ÀÖ´Ù. ¿ª¼·Î ÐÝκԦ Àú, ¡ºÁß±¹»çÀÇ ½Ã ½ºÅÛÀÌ·ÐÀû ºÐ¼®¡»(1995), Warren I. Cohen Àú, ¡º¹Ì±¹Àº µ¿¾Æ½Ã¾Æ¸¦ ¾î¶»°Ô ¹Ù¶óº¸´Â°¡¡»(2003, °ø¿ª), Þ´ù»Ùëò¤ Àú, ¡ºÈ«Äá¡»(1997, °ø¿ª) µîÀÌ ÀÖ´Ù. ³í¹®À¸·Î ¡¸ú°ÔÁ¡°ãéÜá±ÎÆͱ: 1905~1919Ò´¡¹(2002), ¡¸½Ä¹ÎÁö À̹ÌÁöÀÇ Çü¼º°ú ¸à Å»¸®Æ¼¡¹(2005), ¡¸±¹°¡ÀÇ °è¸ù°ú À¯È¤¡¹(2007), ¡°Taiwan and its Self-Images¡±(2007), ¡¸ú°ÔÁñéÏÐúåÇÞÈæÚϼ¡¹(2016) µî ´Ù¼ö ÀÖ´Ù.
À̸ÞÀÏ ha29sb@daum.net