Research Ideas and Outcomes (Jul 2022)

Anthropocenic Objects. Collecting Practices for the Age of Humans

  • Ulrike Sturm,
  • Elisabeth Heyne,
  • Elisa Herrmann,
  • Bergit Arends,
  • Anna-Lisa Dieter,
  • Eric Dorfman,
  • Frank Drauschke,
  • Nicole Heller,
  • Rebecca Kahn,
  • Katja Kaiser,
  • Gerda Koch,
  • Nicolas Kramar,
  • Alicia Mansilla Sánchez,
  • Franz Mauelshagen,
  • Tahani Nadim,
  • Richard Pell,
  • Mareike Petersen,
  • Katharina Schmidt-Loske,
  • Henning Scholz,
  • Colin Sterling,
  • Helmuth Trischler,
  • Sarah Wagner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3897/rio.8.e89446
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8
pp. 1 – 31

Abstract

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The knowledge needed to tackle future environmental and societal challenges can only be generated through exchange between science and society. The conventional distinction made between natural and cultural heritage in museums and other institutions is no longer appropriate in the Anthropocene. Museums must rethink the social and cultural dimensions of existing museum collections and reinvent the organization of knowledge production for our present. In three workshops at the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin, practitioners and interdisciplinary theorists discussed the concept of “Anthropocenic objects” and considered how they create opportunities for the emergence of new collecting practices involving participatory research and open exchange between research, society, and conservation institutions.

Keywords