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Curators and Culture, Curators and Culture, 0817312048, 0-8173-1204-8, 978-0-8173-1204-6, 9780817312046, , History of American Science and Technology, Curators and Culture, 0817382178, 0-8173-8217-8, 978-0-8173-8217-9, 9780817382179, , History of American Science and Technolog
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Curators and Culture
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E Book
2008.
320 pp.
978-0-8173-8217-9
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This volume argues that a small, loosely connected group of men constituted an informal museum movement in America from about 1740 to 1870. As they formed their pioneer museums, these men were guided not so much by European examples, but rather by the imperatives of the American democratic culture, including the Enlightenment, the simultaneous decline of the respectability and rise of the middle classes, the Age of Egalitarianism, and the advent of professionalism in the sciences. Thus the pre-1870 American museum was neither the frivolous sideshow some critics have imagined, nor the enclave for elitists that others have charged. Instead, the proprietors displayed serious motives and egalitarian aspirations. The conflicting demands for popular education on the one hand and professionalism on the other were a continuing source of tension in American museums after about 1835, but by 1870 the two claims had synthesized into a rough parity. This synthesis, the "American Compromise," has remained the basic model of museums in America down to the present. Thus, by 1870, the form of the modern American museum as an institution which simultaneously provides popular education and promotes scholarly research was completely developed.

"[Orosz's] great virtue is immersion in the records of 11 important 18th and 19th century institutionsfrom the various Peale museums to the Wadsworth Atheneum, the academy of Natural Sciences, and the Smithsonian [and] his depiction of a complex and contested cultural history marked both by periods of reaction and democratic faith." Museum News
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Also of Interest
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