The Promise of Cultural Institutions

Author:   David Carr ,  G. Rollie Adams
Publisher:   Rowman & Littlefield
ISBN:  

9780759102927


Pages:   240
Publication Date:   18 June 2003
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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The Promise of Cultural Institutions


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Overview

This thought-provoking collection of essays is essential reading for anyone who cares about cultural institutions and their role in the community of learners. These institutions - often museums or libraries - have the power to profoundly alter our sense of ourselves and of the world around us, but that power carries with it obligations. David Carr challenges us to contemplate both the effects and the responsibilities, to examine carefully the nuances of these experiences. Visit our website for sample chapters!

Full Product Details

Author:   David Carr ,  G. Rollie Adams
Publisher:   Rowman & Littlefield
Imprint:   Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Dimensions:   Width: 14.80cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 22.70cm
Weight:   0.376kg
ISBN:  

9780759102927


ISBN 10:   0759102929
Pages:   240
Publication Date:   18 June 2003
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Part 1 Foreword by G. Rollie Adams Part 2 Introduction: Promises and Institutions Chapter 3 Chapter 1: A Museum is an Open Work I see the museum as I see the library... Chapter 4 Chapter 2: Museums, Educative An educative museum is a cognitive environment... Chapter 5 Chapter 3: In the Contexts of the Possible Great cultural institutions are incendiary... Chapter 6 Chapter 4: A Community Mind Invisible actions, unspoken connections... Chapter 7 Chapter 5: The Situation that Educates It is not the educator who educates... Chapter 8 Chapter 6: A Poetics of Questions What is it? What holds the thing in our minds?... Chapter 9 Chapter 7: Museums and Public Trust Our lives embody interpretations of trust... Chapter 10 Chapter 8: Crafted Truths The child's museum is not about objects... Chapter 11 Chapter 9: The Promise of Cultural Institutions This place we are in is new... Chapter 12 Chapter 10: Ten Lessons and One Rule Learners learn from learners... Part 13 Appendix I: To Read Part 14 Appendix II: To Observe Part 15 Appendix III: Each Life Part 16 Index Part 17 About the Author

Reviews

In our professional literature, 'how to' books far outnumber 'why to' books. This is a 'why to' book. It reminds us why museums and libraries exist and what they have in common. It explores the power that redounds to both as places where knowledge and experience intersect. It calls upon us to expand our vision of the educational and life-enhancing potential that our institutions possess. And it articulates some key principles required to achieve that potential... This is also a 'big picture' book. It is about recalling why we entered our professions and the obligation we have to support the learning of those we serve. This book reminds us that we support our users best by staying focused on the driving concepts of our work and not getting mired in its details. This book makes us understand that at the start of every day we need to remember that our primary task is not to complete the items on our daily agenda. Rather our primary task is to achieve the collective vision of our institutions, and their promise to enable learning. -- G. Rollie Adams From The Foreword Reading David Carr's essays collected in The Promise of Cultural Institutions is very much like being able to participate in a private retreat with a wise and understanding mentor. For all of us who work in or with cultural institutions, these essays offer a constant reminder of the profound importance of our work, and an insightful guide to how to carry out that work more effectively. -- Skramstad, Harold How refreshing! Finally a book on museums and libraries that looks at how these institutions fit into the lives of their users rather than how users fit into the lives of the institutions. And that perspective makes such a difference! -- Wayne A. Wiegand In David Carr's generous thinking the museum becomes a place that supports free inquiry, that is used rather than visited and that generates connections between each learner and the world. This provocative book challenges museums to become places of possibility--where knowledge is not privileged and open-ended questions are nurtured. The Promise of Cultural Institutions offers profound insight into the necessity for great cultural institutions in a civil society. -- Sheppard, Beverly With all the 'how-to' texts that already crowd our shelves, such an insightfully written 'why-to' volume is certainly welcome. Welcome, too, is the remarkably graceful prose with which Carr has enriched the literature of our field. -- Stephen E. Weil, Scholar Emeritus Curator, 46:4 David Carr's series of essays speak of the mystery, promise, and possibilities in our cultural institutions, and he calls to their users to risk being changed by those institutions. After reading The Promise of Cultural Institutions, I will never again be able to enter a library or museum or gallery without being more questioning, more mindful, more open to how the institution connects to my own unfinished life. -- Leigh S. Estabrook [B]rave and compelling ... Carr posits fundamental questions about an endangered relationship of user and institution and asserts that both parties are responsible for the future of museums, libraries, and other collections. Neglecting the deep questions that this book raises would be a mistake for any leader of a cultural institution. -- Keith Donohue Cultural Resources Management David Carr steps back from his enjoyment of museums and his work in libraries to ponder why these cultural institutions are vital parts of our lives. His essays provide a mini-retreat for any museum worker wanting informed reflection on how the institution provides an enriching cognitive environment. -- Sullivan, Pat Muse


In David Carr's generous thinking the museum becomes a place that supports free inquiry, that is used rather than visited and that generates connections between each learner and the world. This provocative book challenges museums to become places of possibility--where knowledge is not privileged and open-ended questions are nurtured. The Promise of Cultural Institutions offers profound insight into the necessity for great cultural institutions in a civil society.--Sheppard, Beverly


In our professional literature, 'how to' books far outnumber 'why to' books. This is a 'why to' book. It reminds us why museums and libraries exist and what they have in common. It explores the power that redounds to both as places where knowledge and experience intersect. It calls upon us to expand our vision of the educational and life-enhancing potential that our institutions possess. And it articulates some key principles required to achieve that potential... This is also a 'big picture' book. It is about recalling why we entered our professions and the obligation we have to support the learning of those we serve. This book reminds us that we support our users best by staying focused on the driving concepts of our work and not getting mired in its details. This book makes us understand that at the start of every day we need to remember that our primary task is not to complete the items on our daily agenda. Rather our primary task is to achieve the collective vision of our institutions, and their promise to enable learning. -- President and C.E.O., Strong Museum, G. Rollie Adams, President and C.E.O., Strong Museum From The Foreword Reading David Carr's essays collected in The Promise of Cultural Institutions is very much like being able to participate in a private retreat with a wise and understanding mentor. For all of us who work in or with cultural institutions, these essays offer a constant reminder of the profound importance of our work, and an insightful guide to how to carry out that work more effectively. -- Harold Skramstad, president emeritus, Henry Ford Museum & Greenfield Village How refreshing! Finally a book on museums and libraries that looks at how these institutions fit into the lives of their users rather than how users fit into the lives of the institutions. And that perspective makes such a difference! -- Wayne A. Wiegand, Professor, School of Library and Information Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Co-Director, Center for the History of Print Culture in Modern America In David Carr's generous thinking the museum becomes a place that supports free inquiry, that is used rather than visited and that generates connections between each learner and the world. This provocative book challenges museums to become places of possibility-where knowledge is not privileged and open-ended questions are nurtured. The Promise of Cultural Institutions offers profound insight into the necessity for great cultural institutions in a civil society. -- Beverly Sheppard, President and CEO, Old Sturbridge Village With all the 'how-to' texts that already crowd our shelves, such an insightfully written 'why-to' volume is certainly welcome. Welcome, too, is the remarkably graceful prose with which Carr has enriched the literature of our field. -- Stephen E. Weil, Scholar Emeritus, Center for Education and Museum Studies, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC. Curator, 46:4 David Carr's series of essays speak of the mystery, promise, and possibilities in our cultural institutions, and he calls to their users to risk being changed by those institutions. After reading The Promise of Cultural Institutions, I will never again be able to enter a library or museum or gallery without being more questioning, more mindful, more open to how the institution connects to my own unfinished life. -- Leigh S. Estabrook, University of Illinois [B]rave and compelling ... Carr posits fundamental questions about an endangered relationship of user and institution and asserts that both parties are responsible for the future of museums, libraries, and other collections. Neglecting the deep questions that this book raises would be a mistake for any leader of a cultural institution. -- Keith Donohue, National Archives and Records Administration Cultural Resources Management David Carr steps back from his enjoyment of museums and his work in libraries to ponder why these cultural institutions are vital parts of our lives. His essays provide a mini-retreat for any museum worker wanting informed reflection on how the institution provides an enriching cognitive environment. -- Pat Sullivan, Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario Muse


Author Information

David Carr speaks and writes as an advocate for critical thinking and reflective practice in libraries, museums, and other cultural institutions. As an inquirer, educator, and consultant, he has observed, spoken, and listened in many of the strongest and most thoughtful American cultural settings. His essays, articles and reviews have appeared in Museum News, Curator, Public Libraries, and in other journals and collections. Holding a B.A. from Drew University, M.A.s from Teachers College, Columbia University and Rutgers, and a Ph.D. from Rutgers, Carr has taught librarians and other educators for thirty-five years. He currently serves on the faculty of the School of Information and Library Science at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, where he teaches about reference tools, collection building, and the topics of these essays: information, culture, and the professional imagination.

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