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    <title>Museum Archipelago - Episodes Tagged with “British Museum”</title>
    <link>https://www.museumarchipelago.com/tags/british%20museum</link>
    <pubDate>Mon, 04 May 2020 09:45:00 -0400</pubDate>
    <description>A tiny show guiding you through the rocky landscape of museums. Museum Archipelago believes that no museum is an island and that museums are not neutral.  
Taking a broad definition of museums, host Ian Elsner brings you to different museum spaces around the world, dives deep into institutional problems, and introduces you to the people working to fix them. Each episode is rarely longer than 15 minutes, so let’s get started.
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    <itunes:subtitle>A tiny show guiding you through the rocky landscape of museums</itunes:subtitle>
    <itunes:author>Ian Elsner</itunes:author>
    <itunes:summary>A tiny show guiding you through the rocky landscape of museums. Museum Archipelago believes that no museum is an island and that museums are not neutral.  
Taking a broad definition of museums, host Ian Elsner brings you to different museum spaces around the world, dives deep into institutional problems, and introduces you to the people working to fix them. Each episode is rarely longer than 15 minutes, so let’s get started.
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    <itunes:keywords>best museum podcast, museum podcast, museums, archipelago, sidedoor, Smithsonian, buzludzha, culture museums</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:name>Ian Elsner</itunes:name>
      <itunes:email>ian.elsner@gmail.com</itunes:email>
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  <title>80. British Museum Curator Sushma Jansari Shares Stories and Experiments of Decolonising Museums</title>
  <link>https://www.museumarchipelago.com/80</link>
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  <pubDate>Mon, 04 May 2020 09:45:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Ian Elsner</author>
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  <itunes:subtitle>The British Museum’s South Asia Collection is full of Indian objects. Dr. Sushma Jansari, Tabor Foundation Curator of South Asia at the British Museum, does not want visitors to overlook the violence of how these objects were brought to the UK to be held in a museum.

So for the 2017 renovation of the South Asia Collection, Jansari, who is the first curator of Indian descent of this collection, made sure to create unexpected moments in the gallery. She highlighted artifacts bequeathed to the museum by South Asian collectors and presented photographs of a modern Jain Temple in Leicester, where she’s from. 

In this episode, Jansari talks about giving visitors the tools to think about the colonial interest in items in the collection, why she started her excellent podcast, The Wonder House, and how not to let the decolonization movement’s momentum evaporate.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>15:25</itunes:duration>
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  <description>&lt;p&gt;The British Museum’s South Asia Collection is full of Indian objects. Dr. Sushma Jansari, Tabor Foundation Curator of South Asia at the British Museum, does not want visitors to overlook the violence of how these objects were brought to the UK to be held in a museum.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;So for the 2017 renovation of the South Asia Collection, Jansari, who is the first curator of Indian descent of this collection, made sure to create unexpected moments in the gallery. She highlighted artifacts bequeathed to the museum by South Asian collectors and presented photographs of a modern Jain Temple in Leicester, where she’s from. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;In this episode, Jansari talks about giving visitors the tools to think about the colonial interest in items in the collection, why she started her excellent podcast, The Wonder House, and how not to let the decolonization movement’s momentum evaporate. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;h3&gt;Topics and Links&lt;/h3&gt;

&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;00:00 Intro&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;00:15 &lt;a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seleucid%E2%80%93Mauryan_war" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;Seleucid–Mauryan war&lt;/a&gt;
&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;00:45 &lt;a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megasthenes" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;Megasthenes&lt;/a&gt;
&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;01:30 &lt;a href="https://twitter.com/sushmajansari?lang=en" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;Dr. Sushma Jansari, Tabor Foundation Curator of South Asia at the British Museum&lt;/a&gt;
&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;02:00 How Events Are Transformed Through History&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;03:00 Decolonising Museums and Collections&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;04:21 &lt;a href="https://www.museumarchipelago.com/39" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;39. Hans Sloane and the Origins of the British Museum With James Delbourgo&lt;/a&gt;
&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;04:50 Empire and Daily Life in the U.K.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;05:46 &lt;a href="https://twitter.com/sushmajansari/status/1053193933810008064?lang=en" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;Being the First South Asian Curator of the South Asia Collection&lt;/a&gt;
&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;06:30 Working on the 2017 Renovation of the British Museum’s South Asia Collection&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;08:00 Creating Unexpected Moments in the Gallery&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;08:15 &lt;a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathura_lion_capital" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;Mathura lion capital&lt;/a&gt;
&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;09:30 Visitation Trends Since the Update&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;10:58 “Not Just One or Two Tweaks”&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;11:10 &lt;a href="https://thewonderhouse.co.uk" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;Why Jansari Started The Wonder House Podcast&lt;/a&gt;
&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;12:10 “Every Movement Has Its Moment”&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;12:30 &lt;a href="https://thewonderhouse.co.uk" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;Subscribe to The Wonder House Podcast&lt;/a&gt; &lt;a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id1486140839?ct=podlink&amp;amp;mt=2&amp;amp;app=podcast&amp;amp;ls=1" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;Apple Podcasts&lt;/a&gt;
&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;13:30 &lt;a href="https://pigeon.srisys.com/museums/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;SPONSOR: Pigeon by SRISYS&lt;/a&gt;
&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;14:28 &lt;a href="https://www.patreon.com/museumarchipelago" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;Outro | Join Club Archipelago 🏖️&lt;/a&gt;
&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Museum Archipelago is a tiny show guiding you through the rocky landscape of museums. Subscribe to the podcast via &lt;a href="https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/museum-archipelago/id1182755184" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;Apple Podcasts&lt;/a&gt;, &lt;a href="https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubXVzZXVtYXJjaGlwZWxhZ28uY29tL3Jzcw==" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;Google Podcasts&lt;/a&gt;, &lt;a href="https://overcast.fm/itunes1182755184/museum-archipelago" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;Overcast&lt;/a&gt;, &lt;a href="https://open.spotify.com/show/5ImpDQJqEypxGNslnImXZE" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;Spotify&lt;/a&gt;, or even &lt;a href="https://museum.substack.com/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;email&lt;/a&gt; to never miss an episode.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;div&gt;
&lt;h3&gt;&lt;a href="https://pigeon.srisys.com/museums/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;Sponsor: Pigeon by SRISYS 🐦&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/h3&gt;
&lt;p&gt;This episode of Museum Archipelago is brought to you by &lt;a href="https://pigeon.srisys.com/museums/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;SRISYS Inc&lt;/a&gt; - an innovative IT Apps Development Company with its Smart Products like Project Eagle - an agile messaging platform and PIGEON - a real-time, intelligent platform that uncovers the power of wayfinding for your museum, enabling your visitors to maximize their day at your venue.
 &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;
Using SRISYS's Pigeon, the museum's management can gather real-time data for managing space effectively about visitors while improving their ROI through marketing automation. Visitors can navigate the maze of a museum with ease, conduct automated and personalized tours based on their interest, RSVP for events, and get more information about the exhibits in front of them.
  &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;
Pigeon is a flexible platform and can be customized to work for your museum. And because the platform takes advantage of low-cost Beacon technology, the app works offline as well! This means less data transmission costs for the museum and bigger savings for visitors when using this app outside their home territory. &lt;a href="https://pigeon.srisys.com/museums/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;Click here find out how Pigeon can help your museum&lt;/a&gt;.
&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;div&gt;
&lt;h3&gt;Transcript&lt;/h3&gt;
Below is a transcript of Museum Archipelago episode 80. Museum Archipelago is produced for the ear and the only the audio of the episode is canonical. For more information on the people and ideas in the episode, refer to the links above.

&lt;div class="wrap-collabsible"&gt;
  
  View Transcript
  &lt;div class="collapsible-content"&gt;
    &lt;div class="content-inner"&gt;
&lt;div&gt;
&lt;p&gt;[Intro]&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;There’s a way to look at history that focuses on the events themselves.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;And then there’s a way to look at history that focuses on the fallout.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;In the 4th century B.C.E., Seleucus who was one of Alexander the Great’s successors, and Chandragupta, who was the first Mauryan emperor in Northern India, met for the first time by the banks of the river Indus, and they had some kind of military encounter.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;What kind of military encounter? Well we don’t really know. What we do know is that, following the encounter, Greek ambassador Megasthenes was sent to the Indian interior for the first time.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;Sushma Jansari: And he wrote an ethnography called the Indica, and it sort of described India for a Greek audience, based on, personal observation, but also the, you know, there's lots of strange storytelling as well and it, this particular text has sort of formed the, the foundation of Western knowledge of India for generations. And you can just imagine that, soldiers, British soldiers in the 19th century took translations of this particular text with them to the Northwest of India when they were exploring. So it's had a very long life, and it's a particular moment that that continues to resonate.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;p&gt;This is Dr. Sushma Jansari, Tabor Foundation Curator of South Asia at the British Museum. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;Sushma Jansari: Hello, I'm Dr. Sushma Jansari. I'm the Tabor Foundation Curator of South Asia at the British museum, and when I'm not at work, I work on my podcast, which is very much a passion project, and this is called The Wonder House.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;p&gt;We’ll get to the Wonder House in a minute, because it’s an excellent podcast, but first, as a doctorate at the University College London, Jansari studied this ancient encounter, of which only Greek descriptions survive.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;Sushma Jansari: that moment of meeting and connection has been completely transformed. It was transformed during the colonial period by British and Indian scholars. And you have British scholars saying, Oh, you know, so, because once ward, and he defeated this Indian general, whereas the Indian scholars wrote the complete opposite. Their take was that Chandragupta got to defeat this incoming European and he became a great leader and ruler. &lt;/p&gt;
  
  &lt;p&gt;So actually, because of this uncertainty, I think it tells us a lot about the time we live in right now and how moments have been transformed in the past. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;p&gt;What we can study is the fallout -- how people interpret these historic events and how that reflects on the moment they are living in now. And of course, what better way to see -- in the form of a building -- how people interpret historic events than a museum itself.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;Sushma Jansari: I think this is why the whole idea of decolonizing museums and collections is so important because I think up till now we've all been complicit and telling very partial stories, under the guise of trying to be neutral. And as we know, that neutrality is quite problematic and it tells a very, very, partial truth or partial version of a story.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Museums are a great way to see what historic events meant to the museum builders, and I can think of no clearer example than the British Museum.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;Sushma Jansari: We have, you know, really incredible exhibitions on say, you know, when you're thinking of ancient South Asia, they're often on Buddhism or Hinduism or Jainism. So they have a very close religious focus. But what they don't tend to address, very rarely that I've ever seen anyway, is how did those collections arrive here? What was the colonial interest in that material and how has it been interpreted? How has it been presented? And also why, why in those particular ways? How, how has that changed over the last, you know, century or so? &lt;/p&gt;
  
  &lt;p&gt;It's too easy to present, so-called neutral view of the ancient past and of ancient religions. But I don't think that's particularly ethical. I think if you’re going to be doing that, you need to be telling that fuller story.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;p&gt;In episode 39 of this show, we examined Hans Sloane and the origins of the British Museum. Funded in large part by his marriage into the enslaving plantocracy of Jamaica and the Atlantic slave trade, and aided by Britain’s rising colonial power and global reach, Sloane assembled an encyclopedic collection of specimens and objects from all around the world that became the bases for the world’s first public museum, The British Museum, a place where anybody could freely enter to see the glory of the British Empire. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;Sushma Jansari: I think empire enfuses pretty much every aspect of life in the U.K., whether we're all aware of it or not, you know, whether it's the names of the streets, we walked down, the, the museums that were founded, the collections, they are hold the structures we still all inhabit. When we actually look around at the museums, most of the museums, I'd say in the U.K., they hold the contents of empire, you know, objects that were collected around the world by colonial officials, by soldiers, by sailors, people working abroad.&lt;/p&gt;
  
  &lt;p&gt;You can't disentangle the two, when you are telling a story, you need to be honest and tell the whole story, or at least as much of it as you can possibly share. Because otherwise you're telling a very, very partial one that often overlooks the violence of an object's collection. and the situation and circumstances it was created, taken, purchased and brought here to the U.K. to be held in a museum.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Today, Jansari is the first curator of Indian descent of the South Asia Collection at the British Museum. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;Sushma Jansari: In the past, truth be told, I didn't really think about it very much. I think it's only when I look at my curatorial practice and how I approach my role, the collections, who I want to work with and how I realized that actually there is a difference between what I do and what other people, you know, in a whole range of institutions bring to their role and at first I was really uncomfortable about that. I thought, my goodness, you know, is it just because of who I am and what I am? What about, you know, my academic side, and you know, all of that and my skills and knowledge, but actually I think it's. My ability to do my job is it's somehow richer. I bring a slightly different perspective to what I do and how I do it.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;p&gt;The South Asia Collection at the British Museum is so enormous that it can capture the sweep of history of South Asia, from the Paleolithic period to the present day. The gallery reopened in 2017 and before that, it was last refurbished in 1992. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;Sushma Jansari: It just happens to be the largest gallery in the museum, so, Hey, no pressure. and I. Yeah, exactly. And everyone's looking, you know, the, so, you know, try not to fail on your first go.&lt;/p&gt;
  
  &lt;p&gt;So it was, it was really tricky. and so we started by thinking, well, who actually comes to the museum and does, I mentioned over 70% of our audience comes from outside the U.K.. And if those people, a huge proportion, they. They're not very well versed in the history, cultures and religions of South Asia, so how would you present your collections in a way that shares this really incredible part of the world with people who don't know a great deal about it? And so we, decided to have a chronic thematic kind of approach. So we started with the paleolithic, which is about one and a half million years ago, and ended at the present day.&lt;/p&gt;
  
  &lt;p&gt;The encyclopedic collections at the museum permits us to be able to do something like that. And as part of that, I sort of worked on the ancient to medieval sections, which is, the, the, the collections I cover along with, the bulk of the anthropological collections and also the textiles. It's got a mammoth collection that I look after.&lt;/p&gt;
  
  &lt;p&gt;But as part of that, I was very keen to introduce moments where, you know, slightly unexpected stories and people were presented. So for example, in the main aisle, you walk down, one of the first sculptures you encounter is the Mathura lion capital, which dates about the first century A.D.&lt;/p&gt;
  
  &lt;p&gt;And it was actually excavated and request to the museum by a South Asian collector, Bhagwan Lal Indraji. And I put a portrait of him on that, on the label as well as a little bit of text explaining it. Cause I wanted people to be confronted by South Asians in the South Asia gallery. It's not enough to, you know, display “their” culture and “their” collections and “their” history. I think it has to be a shared enterprise and, you know, in another section, for example, in the Jainism in Western India, the medieval section, I included photographs of the Jain temple from Leicester, which is where I'm from in the U.K.. &lt;/p&gt;
  
  &lt;p&gt;I wanted to show that the sculptures on display, they are just as much part of British culture, as it was, you know, back then in the medieval period, it's not just some alien religion and alien culture. It's, it's our shared culture now. I think it's really important to sort of connect the dots. So you do share this, sort of broad sweep of history and culture, but then you want to also intersperse it with these other really important moments linking, you know, who and what you might see around you as you're going about your everyday life in the U.K. and linking it with, with the past as well.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;p&gt;I asked Jansari if she’s noticed changes in who visits the gallery and how much time they spend there since the update.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;Sushma Jansari: I'm very interested in who's there, how they engage with different displays, how I can sort of tweak them to make them more engaging. And I have definitely noticed that there are more, South Asians in the gallery space, the South Asia section. This is a really tricky one because, although you hope that a museum is for everybody. The reality is that as you say, a lot of people don't feel that the museum is for them and it's, it's, it's, it's terrible because obviously the museum is for everybody, but once again, when you have very neutral displays and people aren't addressed. People aren't consulted, you aren't working with members of the community. I think it's understandable why they might feel somehow excluded from these spaces. And you know, we've all had moments where we've been chatting to people and they assume that a museum is not for them.&lt;/p&gt;
  
  &lt;p&gt;It's somehow seen as a very different othering space. And when you see the workforce inside the museum, also predominantly white, and. There are very few members of, you know, black and minority ethnic staff in the museums. Once again, what sort of message are you trying to share with everybody else?&lt;/p&gt;
  
  &lt;p&gt;You're saying, Hey, come come to our museum, but you got work here. You know how, how. How do you change that? And I think it's not just one or two tweaks. I think it's a fundamental reimagining of what exactly a museum is and who exactly this museum is for and how do those parts come together? I'm not sure that we yet have those answers, but what I think is really, really important is that we start having these conversations and we start experimenting.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;p&gt;And this is one of the reasons why Jansari started the Wonder House podcast. The podcast, which is completely independent of the British Museum, is a way for Jansari to share the most innovative contemporary approaches to decolonization. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;Sushma Jansari: And so I got in touch with some people whose work I really respect, and I asked them if they were willing to talk about their work, what they learned, what they, what they thought didn't work quite so well, and share their stories and experiments with decolonizing so that everybody could have a chance to listen in on a friendly conversation. See what aspects might work for them, their collections, their institutions, and sort of feel supported and encouraged to experiment. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;p&gt;What I love about The Wonder House is being able to listen in on these conversations that might not be happening in museums themselves, but are happening at coffee houses and pubs nearby. And the show explores the scale too -- you hear Jansari, who works at one of the largest institutions in the world in conversation with people who might be their museum’s only curator. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;Sushma Jansari: Because I think I really worry that the decolonize that the decolonizing museums, sort of incredible energy that it has right now. It's quite easy for that to evaporate. Every single movement has its moment, and unless we embed this kind of, knowledge and approaches, it's going to evaporate and not just the collections, but also, you know, the simple fact that you know, many of us who work in museums, you're often one of the only one or two. black and minority ethnic people in an entire institution. That's not easy. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Jansari studies the ancient world, but now she is at the forefront of modern museum interpretation, printing not just the event, but also how the event rippled through history. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Remember the story about Seleucus, and Chandragupta from the beginning of the episode?&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;Sushma Jansari: And in fact, that Indian interpretation of that moment has won out. And actually if you read, historical novels, modern comics, if you watch, Indian films and Indian TV series, that's exactly the vision of Chandragupta that we have now.&lt;/p&gt;
  
  &lt;p&gt;It's evolving all the time. you know, ideas are being shaped and reshaped, almost day by day at the moment. And I think that's really exciting.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;p&gt;[OUTRO]&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;Sushma Jansari: I remember one time I saw somebody just from the corner of my eye looking, really, it looks as if they're really focusing close on a particular textile. I thought, Oh my God, what is it? Know what's going on? So I wandered over and actually she had a compact out. I was applying her lipstick, so it's always good. You know, you assume you created this amazing display, but you know what?&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;/div&gt; &lt;/div&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;
&lt;br&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;
</description>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>The British Museum’s South Asia Collection is full of Indian objects. Dr. Sushma Jansari, Tabor Foundation Curator of South Asia at the British Museum, does not want visitors to overlook the violence of how these objects were brought to the UK to be held in a museum.</p>

<p>So for the 2017 renovation of the South Asia Collection, Jansari, who is the first curator of Indian descent of this collection, made sure to create unexpected moments in the gallery. She highlighted artifacts bequeathed to the museum by South Asian collectors and presented photographs of a modern Jain Temple in Leicester, where she’s from. </p>

<p>In this episode, Jansari talks about giving visitors the tools to think about the colonial interest in items in the collection, why she started her excellent podcast, The Wonder House, and how not to let the decolonization movement’s momentum evaporate. </p>

<h3>Topics and Links</h3>

<ul>
<li>00:00 Intro</li>
<li>00:15 <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seleucid%E2%80%93Mauryan_war" rel="nofollow">Seleucid–Mauryan war</a></li>
<li>00:45 <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megasthenes" rel="nofollow">Megasthenes</a></li>
<li>01:30 <a href="https://twitter.com/sushmajansari?lang=en" rel="nofollow">Dr. Sushma Jansari, Tabor Foundation Curator of South Asia at the British Museum</a></li>
<li>02:00 How Events Are Transformed Through History</li>
<li>03:00 Decolonising Museums and Collections</li>
<li>04:21 <a href="https://www.museumarchipelago.com/39" rel="nofollow">39. Hans Sloane and the Origins of the British Museum With James Delbourgo</a></li>
<li>04:50 Empire and Daily Life in the U.K.</li>
<li>05:46 <a href="https://twitter.com/sushmajansari/status/1053193933810008064?lang=en" rel="nofollow">Being the First South Asian Curator of the South Asia Collection</a></li>
<li>06:30 Working on the 2017 Renovation of the British Museum’s South Asia Collection</li>
<li>08:00 Creating Unexpected Moments in the Gallery</li>
<li>08:15 <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathura_lion_capital" rel="nofollow">Mathura lion capital</a></li>
<li>09:30 Visitation Trends Since the Update</li>
<li>10:58 “Not Just One or Two Tweaks”</li>
<li>11:10 <a href="https://thewonderhouse.co.uk" rel="nofollow">Why Jansari Started The Wonder House Podcast</a></li>
<li>12:10 “Every Movement Has Its Moment”</li>
<li>12:30 <a href="https://thewonderhouse.co.uk" rel="nofollow">Subscribe to The Wonder House Podcast</a> <a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id1486140839?ct=podlink&mt=2&app=podcast&ls=1" rel="nofollow">Apple Podcasts</a></li>
<li>13:30 <a href="https://pigeon.srisys.com/museums/" rel="nofollow">SPONSOR: Pigeon by SRISYS</a></li>
<li>14:28 <a href="https://www.patreon.com/museumarchipelago" rel="nofollow">Outro | Join Club Archipelago 🏖️</a></li>
</ul>

<p><em>Museum Archipelago is a tiny show guiding you through the rocky landscape of museums. Subscribe to the podcast via <a href="https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/museum-archipelago/id1182755184" rel="nofollow">Apple Podcasts</a>, <a href="https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubXVzZXVtYXJjaGlwZWxhZ28uY29tL3Jzcw==" rel="nofollow">Google Podcasts</a>, <a href="https://overcast.fm/itunes1182755184/museum-archipelago" rel="nofollow">Overcast</a>, <a href="https://open.spotify.com/show/5ImpDQJqEypxGNslnImXZE" rel="nofollow">Spotify</a>, or even <a href="https://museum.substack.com/" rel="nofollow">email</a> to never miss an episode.</em></p>

<div id="club">
<h3><a href="https://pigeon.srisys.com/museums/">Sponsor: Pigeon by SRISYS 🐦</a></h3>
<p>This episode of Museum Archipelago is brought to you by <a href="https://pigeon.srisys.com/museums/">SRISYS Inc</a> - an innovative IT Apps Development Company with its Smart Products like Project Eagle - an agile messaging platform and PIGEON - a real-time, intelligent platform that uncovers the power of wayfinding for your museum, enabling your visitors to maximize their day at your venue.
 <br> <br>
Using SRISYS's Pigeon, the museum's management can gather real-time data for managing space effectively about visitors while improving their ROI through marketing automation. Visitors can navigate the maze of a museum with ease, conduct automated and personalized tours based on their interest, RSVP for events, and get more information about the exhibits in front of them.
  <br> <br>
Pigeon is a flexible platform and can be customized to work for your museum. And because the platform takes advantage of low-cost Beacon technology, the app works offline as well! This means less data transmission costs for the museum and bigger savings for visitors when using this app outside their home territory. <a href="https://pigeon.srisys.com/museums/">Click here find out how Pigeon can help your museum</a>.
</p></div>
<br>
<div id="script">
<h3>Transcript</h3>
Below is a transcript of Museum Archipelago episode 80. Museum Archipelago is produced for the ear and the only the audio of the episode is canonical. For more information on the people and ideas in the episode, refer to the links above.</p>

<div class="wrap-collabsible">
  <input id="collapsible" class="toggle" type="checkbox">
  <label for="collapsible" class="lbl-toggle">View Transcript</label>
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<div>
<p>[Intro]</p>

<p>There’s a way to look at history that focuses on the events themselves.</p>

<p>And then there’s a way to look at history that focuses on the fallout.</p>

<p>In the 4th century B.C.E., Seleucus who was one of Alexander the Great’s successors, and Chandragupta, who was the first Mauryan emperor in Northern India, met for the first time by the banks of the river Indus, and they had some kind of military encounter.</p>

<p>What kind of military encounter? Well we don’t really know. What we do know is that, following the encounter, Greek ambassador Megasthenes was sent to the Indian interior for the first time.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: And he wrote an ethnography called the Indica, and it sort of described India for a Greek audience, based on, personal observation, but also the, you know, there's lots of strange storytelling as well and it, this particular text has sort of formed the, the foundation of Western knowledge of India for generations. And you can just imagine that, soldiers, British soldiers in the 19th century took translations of this particular text with them to the Northwest of India when they were exploring. So it's had a very long life, and it's a particular moment that that continues to resonate.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>This is Dr. Sushma Jansari, Tabor Foundation Curator of South Asia at the British Museum. </p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: Hello, I'm Dr. Sushma Jansari. I'm the Tabor Foundation Curator of South Asia at the British museum, and when I'm not at work, I work on my podcast, which is very much a passion project, and this is called The Wonder House.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>We’ll get to the Wonder House in a minute, because it’s an excellent podcast, but first, as a doctorate at the University College London, Jansari studied this ancient encounter, of which only Greek descriptions survive.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: that moment of meeting and connection has been completely transformed. It was transformed during the colonial period by British and Indian scholars. And you have British scholars saying, Oh, you know, so, because once ward, and he defeated this Indian general, whereas the Indian scholars wrote the complete opposite. Their take was that Chandragupta got to defeat this incoming European and he became a great leader and ruler. </p>
  
  <p>So actually, because of this uncertainty, I think it tells us a lot about the time we live in right now and how moments have been transformed in the past. </p>
</blockquote>

<p>What we can study is the fallout -- how people interpret these historic events and how that reflects on the moment they are living in now. And of course, what better way to see -- in the form of a building -- how people interpret historic events than a museum itself.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: I think this is why the whole idea of decolonizing museums and collections is so important because I think up till now we've all been complicit and telling very partial stories, under the guise of trying to be neutral. And as we know, that neutrality is quite problematic and it tells a very, very, partial truth or partial version of a story.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>Museums are a great way to see what historic events meant to the museum builders, and I can think of no clearer example than the British Museum.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: We have, you know, really incredible exhibitions on say, you know, when you're thinking of ancient South Asia, they're often on Buddhism or Hinduism or Jainism. So they have a very close religious focus. But what they don't tend to address, very rarely that I've ever seen anyway, is how did those collections arrive here? What was the colonial interest in that material and how has it been interpreted? How has it been presented? And also why, why in those particular ways? How, how has that changed over the last, you know, century or so? </p>
  
  <p>It's too easy to present, so-called neutral view of the ancient past and of ancient religions. But I don't think that's particularly ethical. I think if you’re going to be doing that, you need to be telling that fuller story.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>In episode 39 of this show, we examined Hans Sloane and the origins of the British Museum. Funded in large part by his marriage into the enslaving plantocracy of Jamaica and the Atlantic slave trade, and aided by Britain’s rising colonial power and global reach, Sloane assembled an encyclopedic collection of specimens and objects from all around the world that became the bases for the world’s first public museum, The British Museum, a place where anybody could freely enter to see the glory of the British Empire. </p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: I think empire enfuses pretty much every aspect of life in the U.K., whether we're all aware of it or not, you know, whether it's the names of the streets, we walked down, the, the museums that were founded, the collections, they are hold the structures we still all inhabit. When we actually look around at the museums, most of the museums, I'd say in the U.K., they hold the contents of empire, you know, objects that were collected around the world by colonial officials, by soldiers, by sailors, people working abroad.</p>
  
  <p>You can't disentangle the two, when you are telling a story, you need to be honest and tell the whole story, or at least as much of it as you can possibly share. Because otherwise you're telling a very, very partial one that often overlooks the violence of an object's collection. and the situation and circumstances it was created, taken, purchased and brought here to the U.K. to be held in a museum.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>Today, Jansari is the first curator of Indian descent of the South Asia Collection at the British Museum. </p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: In the past, truth be told, I didn't really think about it very much. I think it's only when I look at my curatorial practice and how I approach my role, the collections, who I want to work with and how I realized that actually there is a difference between what I do and what other people, you know, in a whole range of institutions bring to their role and at first I was really uncomfortable about that. I thought, my goodness, you know, is it just because of who I am and what I am? What about, you know, my academic side, and you know, all of that and my skills and knowledge, but actually I think it's. My ability to do my job is it's somehow richer. I bring a slightly different perspective to what I do and how I do it.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>The South Asia Collection at the British Museum is so enormous that it can capture the sweep of history of South Asia, from the Paleolithic period to the present day. The gallery reopened in 2017 and before that, it was last refurbished in 1992. </p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: It just happens to be the largest gallery in the museum, so, Hey, no pressure. and I. Yeah, exactly. And everyone's looking, you know, the, so, you know, try not to fail on your first go.</p>
  
  <p>So it was, it was really tricky. and so we started by thinking, well, who actually comes to the museum and does, I mentioned over 70% of our audience comes from outside the U.K.. And if those people, a huge proportion, they. They're not very well versed in the history, cultures and religions of South Asia, so how would you present your collections in a way that shares this really incredible part of the world with people who don't know a great deal about it? And so we, decided to have a chronic thematic kind of approach. So we started with the paleolithic, which is about one and a half million years ago, and ended at the present day.</p>
  
  <p>The encyclopedic collections at the museum permits us to be able to do something like that. And as part of that, I sort of worked on the ancient to medieval sections, which is, the, the, the collections I cover along with, the bulk of the anthropological collections and also the textiles. It's got a mammoth collection that I look after.</p>
  
  <p>But as part of that, I was very keen to introduce moments where, you know, slightly unexpected stories and people were presented. So for example, in the main aisle, you walk down, one of the first sculptures you encounter is the Mathura lion capital, which dates about the first century A.D.</p>
  
  <p>And it was actually excavated and request to the museum by a South Asian collector, Bhagwan Lal Indraji. And I put a portrait of him on that, on the label as well as a little bit of text explaining it. Cause I wanted people to be confronted by South Asians in the South Asia gallery. It's not enough to, you know, display “their” culture and “their” collections and “their” history. I think it has to be a shared enterprise and, you know, in another section, for example, in the Jainism in Western India, the medieval section, I included photographs of the Jain temple from Leicester, which is where I'm from in the U.K.. </p>
  
  <p>I wanted to show that the sculptures on display, they are just as much part of British culture, as it was, you know, back then in the medieval period, it's not just some alien religion and alien culture. It's, it's our shared culture now. I think it's really important to sort of connect the dots. So you do share this, sort of broad sweep of history and culture, but then you want to also intersperse it with these other really important moments linking, you know, who and what you might see around you as you're going about your everyday life in the U.K. and linking it with, with the past as well.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>I asked Jansari if she’s noticed changes in who visits the gallery and how much time they spend there since the update.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: I'm very interested in who's there, how they engage with different displays, how I can sort of tweak them to make them more engaging. And I have definitely noticed that there are more, South Asians in the gallery space, the South Asia section. This is a really tricky one because, although you hope that a museum is for everybody. The reality is that as you say, a lot of people don't feel that the museum is for them and it's, it's, it's, it's terrible because obviously the museum is for everybody, but once again, when you have very neutral displays and people aren't addressed. People aren't consulted, you aren't working with members of the community. I think it's understandable why they might feel somehow excluded from these spaces. And you know, we've all had moments where we've been chatting to people and they assume that a museum is not for them.</p>
  
  <p>It's somehow seen as a very different othering space. And when you see the workforce inside the museum, also predominantly white, and. There are very few members of, you know, black and minority ethnic staff in the museums. Once again, what sort of message are you trying to share with everybody else?</p>
  
  <p>You're saying, Hey, come come to our museum, but you got work here. You know how, how. How do you change that? And I think it's not just one or two tweaks. I think it's a fundamental reimagining of what exactly a museum is and who exactly this museum is for and how do those parts come together? I'm not sure that we yet have those answers, but what I think is really, really important is that we start having these conversations and we start experimenting.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>And this is one of the reasons why Jansari started the Wonder House podcast. The podcast, which is completely independent of the British Museum, is a way for Jansari to share the most innovative contemporary approaches to decolonization. </p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: And so I got in touch with some people whose work I really respect, and I asked them if they were willing to talk about their work, what they learned, what they, what they thought didn't work quite so well, and share their stories and experiments with decolonizing so that everybody could have a chance to listen in on a friendly conversation. See what aspects might work for them, their collections, their institutions, and sort of feel supported and encouraged to experiment. </p>
</blockquote>

<p>What I love about The Wonder House is being able to listen in on these conversations that might not be happening in museums themselves, but are happening at coffee houses and pubs nearby. And the show explores the scale too -- you hear Jansari, who works at one of the largest institutions in the world in conversation with people who might be their museum’s only curator. </p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: Because I think I really worry that the decolonize that the decolonizing museums, sort of incredible energy that it has right now. It's quite easy for that to evaporate. Every single movement has its moment, and unless we embed this kind of, knowledge and approaches, it's going to evaporate and not just the collections, but also, you know, the simple fact that you know, many of us who work in museums, you're often one of the only one or two. black and minority ethnic people in an entire institution. That's not easy. </p>
</blockquote>

<p>Jansari studies the ancient world, but now she is at the forefront of modern museum interpretation, printing not just the event, but also how the event rippled through history. </p>

<p>Remember the story about Seleucus, and Chandragupta from the beginning of the episode?</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: And in fact, that Indian interpretation of that moment has won out. And actually if you read, historical novels, modern comics, if you watch, Indian films and Indian TV series, that's exactly the vision of Chandragupta that we have now.</p>
  
  <p>It's evolving all the time. you know, ideas are being shaped and reshaped, almost day by day at the moment. And I think that's really exciting.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>[OUTRO]</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: I remember one time I saw somebody just from the corner of my eye looking, really, it looks as if they're really focusing close on a particular textile. I thought, Oh my God, what is it? Know what's going on? So I wandered over and actually she had a compact out. I was applying her lipstick, so it's always good. You know, you assume you created this amazing display, but you know what?</p>
</blockquote>
</div><p><a rel="payment" href="https://www.patreon.com/museumarchipelago">Support Museum Archipelago</a></p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>The British Museum’s South Asia Collection is full of Indian objects. Dr. Sushma Jansari, Tabor Foundation Curator of South Asia at the British Museum, does not want visitors to overlook the violence of how these objects were brought to the UK to be held in a museum.</p>

<p>So for the 2017 renovation of the South Asia Collection, Jansari, who is the first curator of Indian descent of this collection, made sure to create unexpected moments in the gallery. She highlighted artifacts bequeathed to the museum by South Asian collectors and presented photographs of a modern Jain Temple in Leicester, where she’s from. </p>

<p>In this episode, Jansari talks about giving visitors the tools to think about the colonial interest in items in the collection, why she started her excellent podcast, The Wonder House, and how not to let the decolonization movement’s momentum evaporate. </p>

<h3>Topics and Links</h3>

<ul>
<li>00:00 Intro</li>
<li>00:15 <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seleucid%E2%80%93Mauryan_war" rel="nofollow">Seleucid–Mauryan war</a></li>
<li>00:45 <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megasthenes" rel="nofollow">Megasthenes</a></li>
<li>01:30 <a href="https://twitter.com/sushmajansari?lang=en" rel="nofollow">Dr. Sushma Jansari, Tabor Foundation Curator of South Asia at the British Museum</a></li>
<li>02:00 How Events Are Transformed Through History</li>
<li>03:00 Decolonising Museums and Collections</li>
<li>04:21 <a href="https://www.museumarchipelago.com/39" rel="nofollow">39. Hans Sloane and the Origins of the British Museum With James Delbourgo</a></li>
<li>04:50 Empire and Daily Life in the U.K.</li>
<li>05:46 <a href="https://twitter.com/sushmajansari/status/1053193933810008064?lang=en" rel="nofollow">Being the First South Asian Curator of the South Asia Collection</a></li>
<li>06:30 Working on the 2017 Renovation of the British Museum’s South Asia Collection</li>
<li>08:00 Creating Unexpected Moments in the Gallery</li>
<li>08:15 <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathura_lion_capital" rel="nofollow">Mathura lion capital</a></li>
<li>09:30 Visitation Trends Since the Update</li>
<li>10:58 “Not Just One or Two Tweaks”</li>
<li>11:10 <a href="https://thewonderhouse.co.uk" rel="nofollow">Why Jansari Started The Wonder House Podcast</a></li>
<li>12:10 “Every Movement Has Its Moment”</li>
<li>12:30 <a href="https://thewonderhouse.co.uk" rel="nofollow">Subscribe to The Wonder House Podcast</a> <a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id1486140839?ct=podlink&mt=2&app=podcast&ls=1" rel="nofollow">Apple Podcasts</a></li>
<li>13:30 <a href="https://pigeon.srisys.com/museums/" rel="nofollow">SPONSOR: Pigeon by SRISYS</a></li>
<li>14:28 <a href="https://www.patreon.com/museumarchipelago" rel="nofollow">Outro | Join Club Archipelago 🏖️</a></li>
</ul>

<p><em>Museum Archipelago is a tiny show guiding you through the rocky landscape of museums. Subscribe to the podcast via <a href="https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/museum-archipelago/id1182755184" rel="nofollow">Apple Podcasts</a>, <a href="https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubXVzZXVtYXJjaGlwZWxhZ28uY29tL3Jzcw==" rel="nofollow">Google Podcasts</a>, <a href="https://overcast.fm/itunes1182755184/museum-archipelago" rel="nofollow">Overcast</a>, <a href="https://open.spotify.com/show/5ImpDQJqEypxGNslnImXZE" rel="nofollow">Spotify</a>, or even <a href="https://museum.substack.com/" rel="nofollow">email</a> to never miss an episode.</em></p>

<div id="club">
<h3><a href="https://pigeon.srisys.com/museums/">Sponsor: Pigeon by SRISYS 🐦</a></h3>
<p>This episode of Museum Archipelago is brought to you by <a href="https://pigeon.srisys.com/museums/">SRISYS Inc</a> - an innovative IT Apps Development Company with its Smart Products like Project Eagle - an agile messaging platform and PIGEON - a real-time, intelligent platform that uncovers the power of wayfinding for your museum, enabling your visitors to maximize their day at your venue.
 <br> <br>
Using SRISYS's Pigeon, the museum's management can gather real-time data for managing space effectively about visitors while improving their ROI through marketing automation. Visitors can navigate the maze of a museum with ease, conduct automated and personalized tours based on their interest, RSVP for events, and get more information about the exhibits in front of them.
  <br> <br>
Pigeon is a flexible platform and can be customized to work for your museum. And because the platform takes advantage of low-cost Beacon technology, the app works offline as well! This means less data transmission costs for the museum and bigger savings for visitors when using this app outside their home territory. <a href="https://pigeon.srisys.com/museums/">Click here find out how Pigeon can help your museum</a>.
</p></div>
<br>
<div id="script">
<h3>Transcript</h3>
Below is a transcript of Museum Archipelago episode 80. Museum Archipelago is produced for the ear and the only the audio of the episode is canonical. For more information on the people and ideas in the episode, refer to the links above.</p>

<div class="wrap-collabsible">
  <input id="collapsible" class="toggle" type="checkbox">
  <label for="collapsible" class="lbl-toggle">View Transcript</label>
  <div class="collapsible-content">
    <div class="content-inner">
<div>
<p>[Intro]</p>

<p>There’s a way to look at history that focuses on the events themselves.</p>

<p>And then there’s a way to look at history that focuses on the fallout.</p>

<p>In the 4th century B.C.E., Seleucus who was one of Alexander the Great’s successors, and Chandragupta, who was the first Mauryan emperor in Northern India, met for the first time by the banks of the river Indus, and they had some kind of military encounter.</p>

<p>What kind of military encounter? Well we don’t really know. What we do know is that, following the encounter, Greek ambassador Megasthenes was sent to the Indian interior for the first time.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: And he wrote an ethnography called the Indica, and it sort of described India for a Greek audience, based on, personal observation, but also the, you know, there's lots of strange storytelling as well and it, this particular text has sort of formed the, the foundation of Western knowledge of India for generations. And you can just imagine that, soldiers, British soldiers in the 19th century took translations of this particular text with them to the Northwest of India when they were exploring. So it's had a very long life, and it's a particular moment that that continues to resonate.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>This is Dr. Sushma Jansari, Tabor Foundation Curator of South Asia at the British Museum. </p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: Hello, I'm Dr. Sushma Jansari. I'm the Tabor Foundation Curator of South Asia at the British museum, and when I'm not at work, I work on my podcast, which is very much a passion project, and this is called The Wonder House.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>We’ll get to the Wonder House in a minute, because it’s an excellent podcast, but first, as a doctorate at the University College London, Jansari studied this ancient encounter, of which only Greek descriptions survive.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: that moment of meeting and connection has been completely transformed. It was transformed during the colonial period by British and Indian scholars. And you have British scholars saying, Oh, you know, so, because once ward, and he defeated this Indian general, whereas the Indian scholars wrote the complete opposite. Their take was that Chandragupta got to defeat this incoming European and he became a great leader and ruler. </p>
  
  <p>So actually, because of this uncertainty, I think it tells us a lot about the time we live in right now and how moments have been transformed in the past. </p>
</blockquote>

<p>What we can study is the fallout -- how people interpret these historic events and how that reflects on the moment they are living in now. And of course, what better way to see -- in the form of a building -- how people interpret historic events than a museum itself.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: I think this is why the whole idea of decolonizing museums and collections is so important because I think up till now we've all been complicit and telling very partial stories, under the guise of trying to be neutral. And as we know, that neutrality is quite problematic and it tells a very, very, partial truth or partial version of a story.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>Museums are a great way to see what historic events meant to the museum builders, and I can think of no clearer example than the British Museum.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: We have, you know, really incredible exhibitions on say, you know, when you're thinking of ancient South Asia, they're often on Buddhism or Hinduism or Jainism. So they have a very close religious focus. But what they don't tend to address, very rarely that I've ever seen anyway, is how did those collections arrive here? What was the colonial interest in that material and how has it been interpreted? How has it been presented? And also why, why in those particular ways? How, how has that changed over the last, you know, century or so? </p>
  
  <p>It's too easy to present, so-called neutral view of the ancient past and of ancient religions. But I don't think that's particularly ethical. I think if you’re going to be doing that, you need to be telling that fuller story.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>In episode 39 of this show, we examined Hans Sloane and the origins of the British Museum. Funded in large part by his marriage into the enslaving plantocracy of Jamaica and the Atlantic slave trade, and aided by Britain’s rising colonial power and global reach, Sloane assembled an encyclopedic collection of specimens and objects from all around the world that became the bases for the world’s first public museum, The British Museum, a place where anybody could freely enter to see the glory of the British Empire. </p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: I think empire enfuses pretty much every aspect of life in the U.K., whether we're all aware of it or not, you know, whether it's the names of the streets, we walked down, the, the museums that were founded, the collections, they are hold the structures we still all inhabit. When we actually look around at the museums, most of the museums, I'd say in the U.K., they hold the contents of empire, you know, objects that were collected around the world by colonial officials, by soldiers, by sailors, people working abroad.</p>
  
  <p>You can't disentangle the two, when you are telling a story, you need to be honest and tell the whole story, or at least as much of it as you can possibly share. Because otherwise you're telling a very, very partial one that often overlooks the violence of an object's collection. and the situation and circumstances it was created, taken, purchased and brought here to the U.K. to be held in a museum.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>Today, Jansari is the first curator of Indian descent of the South Asia Collection at the British Museum. </p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: In the past, truth be told, I didn't really think about it very much. I think it's only when I look at my curatorial practice and how I approach my role, the collections, who I want to work with and how I realized that actually there is a difference between what I do and what other people, you know, in a whole range of institutions bring to their role and at first I was really uncomfortable about that. I thought, my goodness, you know, is it just because of who I am and what I am? What about, you know, my academic side, and you know, all of that and my skills and knowledge, but actually I think it's. My ability to do my job is it's somehow richer. I bring a slightly different perspective to what I do and how I do it.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>The South Asia Collection at the British Museum is so enormous that it can capture the sweep of history of South Asia, from the Paleolithic period to the present day. The gallery reopened in 2017 and before that, it was last refurbished in 1992. </p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: It just happens to be the largest gallery in the museum, so, Hey, no pressure. and I. Yeah, exactly. And everyone's looking, you know, the, so, you know, try not to fail on your first go.</p>
  
  <p>So it was, it was really tricky. and so we started by thinking, well, who actually comes to the museum and does, I mentioned over 70% of our audience comes from outside the U.K.. And if those people, a huge proportion, they. They're not very well versed in the history, cultures and religions of South Asia, so how would you present your collections in a way that shares this really incredible part of the world with people who don't know a great deal about it? And so we, decided to have a chronic thematic kind of approach. So we started with the paleolithic, which is about one and a half million years ago, and ended at the present day.</p>
  
  <p>The encyclopedic collections at the museum permits us to be able to do something like that. And as part of that, I sort of worked on the ancient to medieval sections, which is, the, the, the collections I cover along with, the bulk of the anthropological collections and also the textiles. It's got a mammoth collection that I look after.</p>
  
  <p>But as part of that, I was very keen to introduce moments where, you know, slightly unexpected stories and people were presented. So for example, in the main aisle, you walk down, one of the first sculptures you encounter is the Mathura lion capital, which dates about the first century A.D.</p>
  
  <p>And it was actually excavated and request to the museum by a South Asian collector, Bhagwan Lal Indraji. And I put a portrait of him on that, on the label as well as a little bit of text explaining it. Cause I wanted people to be confronted by South Asians in the South Asia gallery. It's not enough to, you know, display “their” culture and “their” collections and “their” history. I think it has to be a shared enterprise and, you know, in another section, for example, in the Jainism in Western India, the medieval section, I included photographs of the Jain temple from Leicester, which is where I'm from in the U.K.. </p>
  
  <p>I wanted to show that the sculptures on display, they are just as much part of British culture, as it was, you know, back then in the medieval period, it's not just some alien religion and alien culture. It's, it's our shared culture now. I think it's really important to sort of connect the dots. So you do share this, sort of broad sweep of history and culture, but then you want to also intersperse it with these other really important moments linking, you know, who and what you might see around you as you're going about your everyday life in the U.K. and linking it with, with the past as well.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>I asked Jansari if she’s noticed changes in who visits the gallery and how much time they spend there since the update.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: I'm very interested in who's there, how they engage with different displays, how I can sort of tweak them to make them more engaging. And I have definitely noticed that there are more, South Asians in the gallery space, the South Asia section. This is a really tricky one because, although you hope that a museum is for everybody. The reality is that as you say, a lot of people don't feel that the museum is for them and it's, it's, it's, it's terrible because obviously the museum is for everybody, but once again, when you have very neutral displays and people aren't addressed. People aren't consulted, you aren't working with members of the community. I think it's understandable why they might feel somehow excluded from these spaces. And you know, we've all had moments where we've been chatting to people and they assume that a museum is not for them.</p>
  
  <p>It's somehow seen as a very different othering space. And when you see the workforce inside the museum, also predominantly white, and. There are very few members of, you know, black and minority ethnic staff in the museums. Once again, what sort of message are you trying to share with everybody else?</p>
  
  <p>You're saying, Hey, come come to our museum, but you got work here. You know how, how. How do you change that? And I think it's not just one or two tweaks. I think it's a fundamental reimagining of what exactly a museum is and who exactly this museum is for and how do those parts come together? I'm not sure that we yet have those answers, but what I think is really, really important is that we start having these conversations and we start experimenting.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>And this is one of the reasons why Jansari started the Wonder House podcast. The podcast, which is completely independent of the British Museum, is a way for Jansari to share the most innovative contemporary approaches to decolonization. </p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: And so I got in touch with some people whose work I really respect, and I asked them if they were willing to talk about their work, what they learned, what they, what they thought didn't work quite so well, and share their stories and experiments with decolonizing so that everybody could have a chance to listen in on a friendly conversation. See what aspects might work for them, their collections, their institutions, and sort of feel supported and encouraged to experiment. </p>
</blockquote>

<p>What I love about The Wonder House is being able to listen in on these conversations that might not be happening in museums themselves, but are happening at coffee houses and pubs nearby. And the show explores the scale too -- you hear Jansari, who works at one of the largest institutions in the world in conversation with people who might be their museum’s only curator. </p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: Because I think I really worry that the decolonize that the decolonizing museums, sort of incredible energy that it has right now. It's quite easy for that to evaporate. Every single movement has its moment, and unless we embed this kind of, knowledge and approaches, it's going to evaporate and not just the collections, but also, you know, the simple fact that you know, many of us who work in museums, you're often one of the only one or two. black and minority ethnic people in an entire institution. That's not easy. </p>
</blockquote>

<p>Jansari studies the ancient world, but now she is at the forefront of modern museum interpretation, printing not just the event, but also how the event rippled through history. </p>

<p>Remember the story about Seleucus, and Chandragupta from the beginning of the episode?</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: And in fact, that Indian interpretation of that moment has won out. And actually if you read, historical novels, modern comics, if you watch, Indian films and Indian TV series, that's exactly the vision of Chandragupta that we have now.</p>
  
  <p>It's evolving all the time. you know, ideas are being shaped and reshaped, almost day by day at the moment. And I think that's really exciting.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>[OUTRO]</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Sushma Jansari: I remember one time I saw somebody just from the corner of my eye looking, really, it looks as if they're really focusing close on a particular textile. I thought, Oh my God, what is it? Know what's going on? So I wandered over and actually she had a compact out. I was applying her lipstick, so it's always good. You know, you assume you created this amazing display, but you know what?</p>
</blockquote>
</div><p><a rel="payment" href="https://www.patreon.com/museumarchipelago">Support Museum Archipelago</a></p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
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  <title>39. Hans Sloane and the Origins of the British Museum with James Delbourgo</title>
  <link>https://www.museumarchipelago.com/39</link>
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  <pubDate>Mon, 02 Apr 2018 07:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Ian Elsner</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/ec795200-a9bd-4922-b8c9-550824e1648e/248f5f85-ea79-4431-bc41-c3104dbbe571.mp3" length="19351424" type="audio/mp3"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:author>Ian Elsner</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Over the course of his long life, Hans Sloane collected tens of thousands of items which became the basis for what is today the British Museum.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>12:33</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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  <description>&lt;p&gt;Over the course of his long life, Hans Sloane collected tens of thousands of items which became the basis for what is today the British Museum. Funded in large part by his marriage into the enslaving plantocracy of Jamaica and the Atlantic slave trade, and aided by Britain’s rising colonial power and global reach, he assembled an encyclopedic collection of specimens and objects from all around the world.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href="http://history.rutgers.edu/faculty-directory/307-delbourgo-james" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;James Delbourgo&lt;/a&gt;, professor of History of Science and Atlantic World at Rutgers University, is the author of &lt;em&gt;&lt;a href="https://amzn.to/2uG0La8" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;Collecting the World: Hans Sloane and the Origins of the British Museum&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/em&gt;. In this episode, Delbourgo describes Sloane’s formative years in Jamaica, how his collection was an attempt to catalogue the wonders and intricacies of a divine creation, and how the British Museum, which opened in 1759, came into being as a result of the terms Sloane laid down in his will. Delbourgo also discusses how Sloane’s idea of universal public access to his collections remains radical to this day.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Guest:&lt;br&gt;&lt;a href="https://twitter.com/curiouseels?lang=en" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;James Delbourgo&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Book:&lt;br&gt;&lt;a href="https://amzn.to/2uG0La8" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;Collecting the World: Hans Sloane and the Origins of the British Museum&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Topics Discussed:&lt;br&gt;00:00: Intro&lt;br&gt;00:15: James Delbourgo&lt;br&gt;00:40: &lt;a href="https://amzn.to/2uG0La8" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;Hans Sloane&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;02:10: Sloane in Jamaica&lt;br&gt;02:58: &lt;a href="https://today.duke.edu/2016/06/musicalpassage" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;Earliest Transcription of African Music in the Americas&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;04:21: Sloane in London&lt;br&gt;06:58: Universal Public Access at the British Museum&lt;br&gt;10:40: Admission Charges at the Metropolitan Museum of Art &lt;br&gt;11:27: &lt;a href="http://hhethmon.com/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;Recommendation: Museums in Strange Places&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;12:00: Outro&lt;/p&gt;

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&lt;/p&gt;&lt;h3&gt;Transcript&lt;/h3&gt;
Below is a transcript of Museum Archipelago episode 39. For more information on the people and ideas in the episode, refer to the links above.

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        &lt;p&gt;Welcome to Museum Archipelago. I'm Ian Elsner. Museum Archipelago is your audio guide through the landscape of museums. Each episode is never longer than 15 minutes, so let's get started.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;James Delbourgo: My name is James Delbourgo. I am a professor of history of science and the Atlantic world at Rutgers and I'm the author of a recent book, Collecting the World: Hans Sloane and the Origins of the British Museum. It's a book that tells the story of Hans Sloane and how the British Museum came into existence in the 1750s.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Hans Sloane was born in the north of Ireland in 1660, and he moved to London at the age of 19. He trained as a botanist and as a physician.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;James Delbourgo: But in 1687, he becomes physician to the new governor of Jamaica, the Duke of Albemarle, and he set sail with Albemarle really for two reasons. Of course, this is in part fortune seeking and Sloane hopes to become wealthy by sailing to Jamaica, which is just at this time becoming intensively converted to slave labor and sugar cultivation. Sloane goes to Jamaica really when Jamaica is beginning its rises through sugar and slavery, what will become one of the most lucrative colonies of the British Empire in the 18th century. So he has material incentives, but also botanical incentives and medical incentives, hoping to find new drugs that Europeans don't yet know about and also hoping to collect, record, note down information about as many new exotic plants and potentially animal species as he can. It's a very particular moment where scientific ambition and personal ambition coincide with the opening up of these new lucrative island colonies in the Caribbean by the British through sugar and slavery at the end of the 17th century.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;p&gt;In Jamaica, Sloane began writing his two-volume book, Natural History, and became deeply embedded with Indian slaving plantocracy.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;James Delbourgo: You have Sloane who is the friend of planters and will ultimately marry into a plantocracy by marrying a Jamaican widow by the name of Elizabeth Langley Rose from whom he receives money from sugar plantations that ultimately feed his collecting. Sloane is part of all of that, and indeed in his Natural History, he justifies and defends the use of violence to maintain the profitability of slavery.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Sloane's Natural History was mostly a collection of what plants grow in Jamaica and what could be profitably extracted from the land. He took as much of it as he could to add to his growing collection. But it wasn't just plants.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;James Delbourgo: Also in that book, recorded on staves, extremely rare for this period, is musical notation that is a version of musical performance executed by enslaved west Africans in Jamaica in the late 17th century that Sloane claims to have witnessed. There are very few other travelers who go to these empirical lengths to record the music played by enslaved Africans and indeed to collect their instruments, which he does, and he brings their banjo like [inaudible]. That's the term he uses for them in his Natural History.&lt;/p&gt;
  
  &lt;p&gt;James Delbourgo: There's an extraordinary contradiction or tension between acts of exploitation and acts of preservation. This is in no way to condone or justify or sympathize with those kinds of justifications for what was, of course, a brutal legalized stem of violence in the pursuit of profit. His curiosity is a very complex, generative curiosity because it is this universalistic form of natural history that has a reach into many different domains that will later become specialized in distinct in the 19th and in the 20th century.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;p&gt;After he comes back to England, he never leaves again, and yet he continues collecting. Here he is, he has book wheels.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;James Delbourgo: Yes.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Books upon books, which he's writing down, keeping track of all of this. He's doing so without a computer. He's doing so in a way that I think many of us who use computers all day are familiar with, but he's doing so in the context of the late 17th century. Did you ever have that thought when you were looking through his collection about how modern his problem was? His problem being, there's a lot of stuff that I need to catalog.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;James Delbourgo: Well, it did occur to me after a while. You're quite right, I think, to point to something that looks very familiar to us, which is the classification and the categorization of many different kinds of information. We attempt to manage this challenge electronically and Sloane attempted to manage this project on paper through correspondence, through applying paper labels with inked numbers to specimens and curiosities, putting them in certain parts of his house, which doubled as his private museum. Each number on each thing, linking them to an entry and a catalog. What these European naturalists saw themselves as doing was somehow cataloging the divine creation. There was a religious idea that there was a unity to the world that was a divine unity. That was a reflection of the omnipotence and wisdom and divine design.&lt;/p&gt;
  
  &lt;p&gt;James Delbourgo: Of course, I didn't mean that somebody like Sloane was not also pursuing profit and interested in drugs and food stuffs that could be turned into commodities. That's absolutely the case at the same time so both of these things are true. And in that sense, the commercial management of global information, the global management of commodities reduced to short descriptions, this is not a bad way at all to characterize what Sloane was doing on paper. Something that goes on in our own time in electronic form so Sloane is part of a long history of that. But at the same time, he's also sorting what he sees as the creation into discreet catalogs of kinds of things as God designed them: fossils, birds, eggs, plants, fish, artificial curiosities, and so on and so forth. I&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;p&gt;I would like to turn my attention and my question to that legacy of founding the British Museum. How much of our understanding of a big museum like the British museum actually owes to this one sentence that Sloane wrote that he wanted his collection to be free and universally accessible and how much of a problem that was?&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;blockquote&gt;
  &lt;p&gt;James Delbourgo: Well, you touch on an absolutely fundamental theme, which we could say is the theme of the public museum. Sloane, like many collectors, was very preoccupied with what would become of his life's work. He had already during the course of his lifetime absorbed collections by a number of other collectors. Really during his life, he evolves into a kind of human living repository of other people's natural history collections.&lt;/p&gt;
  
  &lt;p&gt;James Delbourgo: Don't forget he's extremely wealthy for many reasons: Income from the Jamaica sugar plantations, salaries and various other things. He's very long lived. Lives to be 92. What that means is he is able to collect the collections of people who are friends and acquaintances. It almost becomes proverbial that in London, center of an expanding empire at this time in the early 18th century, if somebody pops off and they had a great collection, that collection should go just to the hand Sloane because he's already evolved into this holding operation, a guardian on behalf of the public. That idea of public access to collections doesn't really exist in the first half of the 18th century in a very robust way.&lt;/p&gt;
  
  &lt;p&gt;James Delbourgo: He's one of the people that's going to invent that. There is something extraordinarily significant about the language in his will, which you have quoted, which then becomes the basis of the British Museum Act, which creates the British Museum as an institution where his collections along with certain others that get added to them will be publicly accessible in a very interesting way. Even more interesting is the reaction of many, not all, but many curators, early curators at the British Museum in the 18th century. They say to themselves, "Oh, my God. Now here comes the public. We've got to let the great unwashed in to see all these things. How are we going to do this? How are we going to manage this?" A number of them, and I quote the evidence in the book, are extremely vexed by the idea of what to them is a radical departure where we will allow the different classes and genders to mix in the museum.&lt;/p&gt;
  
  &lt;p&gt;James Delbourgo: That was not an easy idea. That ran into... Sloane set this up and then he died. He didn't have to deal with it. The curators did, and they balked at it. That then becomes a much longer story of really what is a public institution? Who really does have what kind of access under what kind of conditions? It is always mediated inevitably. I think that's always a question worth asking, and it's a long story even to the current day. As we know, for example, the Metropolitan Museum in some sense is a descendant of the universal encyclopedic tradition in New York found in the 1870s has decided to introduce admission charges for people living outside New York state.&lt;/p&gt;
  
  &lt;p&gt;James Delbourgo: The conditions of public access are never finally resolved and they can become more liberal or less liberal as time goes by, and I think that's a question that we all have to watch. I think Sloane is setting that up through his legacy in an extraordinary way and we are all to some extent I would say the heirs of such a tradition. But there's no guarantee that it will continue to liberalize. In fact, it may become subject to greater constraint and you could say that given the economic situation we're living in today, we are looking at potentially more constraint on our access to these public institutions.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;

&lt;p&gt;IDelbourgo's book is called Collecting the World: Hans Sloane and the Origins of the British Museum. It's a great read and you can find it in the show notes for this episode.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;No surprise that I'm a huge fan of podcasts and I'm always interested in new ones. If you like Museum Archipelago, you should also download Museums in Strange Places, a podcast about Icelandic museums by Hannah Hethmon. Hannah was featured on Episode 33 of this show, talking about her work cataloging Icelandic museums. For new listeners, Hannah recommends starting with Episode 11 about how seals are saving Hvammstangi. Go find Museums in Strange Places wherever you subscribe to podcasts.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;This has been Museum Archipelago. If you like the show, you can support me by joining Club Archipelago. In exchange for your support, you'll get access to a new premium audio feed that guides you further behind the scenes of museums. You can join the club by going to patreon.com/museumarchipelago or looking in the show notes for this episode. For more information or to submit feedback, go to museumarchipelago.com or museum_go on Twitter. Next time, bring a friend.&lt;/p&gt;
        

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    <![CDATA[<p>Over the course of his long life, Hans Sloane collected tens of thousands of items which became the basis for what is today the British Museum. Funded in large part by his marriage into the enslaving plantocracy of Jamaica and the Atlantic slave trade, and aided by Britain’s rising colonial power and global reach, he assembled an encyclopedic collection of specimens and objects from all around the world.</p><p><a href="http://history.rutgers.edu/faculty-directory/307-delbourgo-james">James Delbourgo</a>, professor of History of Science and Atlantic World at Rutgers University, is the author of <em><a href="https://amzn.to/2uG0La8">Collecting the World: Hans Sloane and the Origins of the British Museum</a></em>. In this episode, Delbourgo describes Sloane’s formative years in Jamaica, how his collection was an attempt to catalogue the wonders and intricacies of a divine creation, and how the British Museum, which opened in 1759, came into being as a result of the terms Sloane laid down in his will. Delbourgo also discusses how Sloane’s idea of universal public access to his collections remains radical to this day.</p><p>Guest:<br /><a href="https://twitter.com/curiouseels?lang=en">James Delbourgo</a></p><p>Book:<br /><a href="https://amzn.to/2uG0La8"><em>Collecting the World: Hans Sloane and the Origins of the British Museum</em></a></p><p>Topics Discussed:<br />00:00: Intro<br />00:15: James Delbourgo<br />00:40:&nbsp;<a href="https://amzn.to/2uG0La8">Hans Sloane</a><br />02:10: Sloane in Jamaica<br />02:58:&nbsp;<a href="https://today.duke.edu/2016/06/musicalpassage">Earliest Transcription of African Music in the Americas</a><br />04:21: Sloane in London<br />06:58: Universal Public Access at the British Museum<br />10:40: Admission Charges at the Metropolitan Museum of Art <br />11:27:&nbsp;<a href="http://hhethmon.com/">Recommendation: Museums in Strange Places</a><br />12:00: Outro</p>

<p><em>Museum Archipelago is a tiny show guiding you through the rocky landscape of museums. Subscribe to the podcast via <a href="https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/museum-archipelago/id1182755184" rel="nofollow">Apple Podcasts</a>, <a href="https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubXVzZXVtYXJjaGlwZWxhZ28uY29tL3Jzcw==" rel="nofollow">Google Podcasts</a>, <a href="https://overcast.fm/itunes1182755184/museum-archipelago" rel="nofollow">Overcast</a>, <a href="https://open.spotify.com/show/5ImpDQJqEypxGNslnImXZE" rel="nofollow">Spotify</a>, or even <a href="https://museum.substack.com/" rel="nofollow">email</a> to never miss an episode.</em></p>

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<p>
<h3>Transcript</h3>
Below is a transcript of Museum Archipelago episode 39. For more information on the people and ideas in the episode, refer to the links above.</p>

<div class="wrap-collabsible">
  <input id="collapsible" class="toggle" type="checkbox">
  <label for="collapsible" class="lbl-toggle">View Transcript</label>
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        <p>Welcome to Museum Archipelago. I'm Ian Elsner. Museum Archipelago is your audio guide through the landscape of museums. Each episode is never longer than 15 minutes, so let's get started.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>James Delbourgo: My name is James Delbourgo. I am a professor of history of science and the Atlantic world at Rutgers and I'm the author of a recent book, Collecting the World: Hans Sloane and the Origins of the British Museum. It's a book that tells the story of Hans Sloane and how the British Museum came into existence in the 1750s.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>Hans Sloane was born in the north of Ireland in 1660, and he moved to London at the age of 19. He trained as a botanist and as a physician.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>James Delbourgo: But in 1687, he becomes physician to the new governor of Jamaica, the Duke of Albemarle, and he set sail with Albemarle really for two reasons. Of course, this is in part fortune seeking and Sloane hopes to become wealthy by sailing to Jamaica, which is just at this time becoming intensively converted to slave labor and sugar cultivation. Sloane goes to Jamaica really when Jamaica is beginning its rises through sugar and slavery, what will become one of the most lucrative colonies of the British Empire in the 18th century. So he has material incentives, but also botanical incentives and medical incentives, hoping to find new drugs that Europeans don't yet know about and also hoping to collect, record, note down information about as many new exotic plants and potentially animal species as he can. It's a very particular moment where scientific ambition and personal ambition coincide with the opening up of these new lucrative island colonies in the Caribbean by the British through sugar and slavery at the end of the 17th century.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>In Jamaica, Sloane began writing his two-volume book, Natural History, and became deeply embedded with Indian slaving plantocracy.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>James Delbourgo: You have Sloane who is the friend of planters and will ultimately marry into a plantocracy by marrying a Jamaican widow by the name of Elizabeth Langley Rose from whom he receives money from sugar plantations that ultimately feed his collecting. Sloane is part of all of that, and indeed in his Natural History, he justifies and defends the use of violence to maintain the profitability of slavery.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>Sloane's Natural History was mostly a collection of what plants grow in Jamaica and what could be profitably extracted from the land. He took as much of it as he could to add to his growing collection. But it wasn't just plants.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>James Delbourgo: Also in that book, recorded on staves, extremely rare for this period, is musical notation that is a version of musical performance executed by enslaved west Africans in Jamaica in the late 17th century that Sloane claims to have witnessed. There are very few other travelers who go to these empirical lengths to record the music played by enslaved Africans and indeed to collect their instruments, which he does, and he brings their banjo like [inaudible]. That's the term he uses for them in his Natural History.</p>
  
  <p>James Delbourgo: There's an extraordinary contradiction or tension between acts of exploitation and acts of preservation. This is in no way to condone or justify or sympathize with those kinds of justifications for what was, of course, a brutal legalized stem of violence in the pursuit of profit. His curiosity is a very complex, generative curiosity because it is this universalistic form of natural history that has a reach into many different domains that will later become specialized in distinct in the 19th and in the 20th century.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>After he comes back to England, he never leaves again, and yet he continues collecting. Here he is, he has book wheels.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>James Delbourgo: Yes.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>Books upon books, which he's writing down, keeping track of all of this. He's doing so without a computer. He's doing so in a way that I think many of us who use computers all day are familiar with, but he's doing so in the context of the late 17th century. Did you ever have that thought when you were looking through his collection about how modern his problem was? His problem being, there's a lot of stuff that I need to catalog.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>James Delbourgo: Well, it did occur to me after a while. You're quite right, I think, to point to something that looks very familiar to us, which is the classification and the categorization of many different kinds of information. We attempt to manage this challenge electronically and Sloane attempted to manage this project on paper through correspondence, through applying paper labels with inked numbers to specimens and curiosities, putting them in certain parts of his house, which doubled as his private museum. Each number on each thing, linking them to an entry and a catalog. What these European naturalists saw themselves as doing was somehow cataloging the divine creation. There was a religious idea that there was a unity to the world that was a divine unity. That was a reflection of the omnipotence and wisdom and divine design.</p>
  
  <p>James Delbourgo: Of course, I didn't mean that somebody like Sloane was not also pursuing profit and interested in drugs and food stuffs that could be turned into commodities. That's absolutely the case at the same time so both of these things are true. And in that sense, the commercial management of global information, the global management of commodities reduced to short descriptions, this is not a bad way at all to characterize what Sloane was doing on paper. Something that goes on in our own time in electronic form so Sloane is part of a long history of that. But at the same time, he's also sorting what he sees as the creation into discreet catalogs of kinds of things as God designed them: fossils, birds, eggs, plants, fish, artificial curiosities, and so on and so forth. I</p>
</blockquote>

<p>I would like to turn my attention and my question to that legacy of founding the British Museum. How much of our understanding of a big museum like the British museum actually owes to this one sentence that Sloane wrote that he wanted his collection to be free and universally accessible and how much of a problem that was?</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>James Delbourgo: Well, you touch on an absolutely fundamental theme, which we could say is the theme of the public museum. Sloane, like many collectors, was very preoccupied with what would become of his life's work. He had already during the course of his lifetime absorbed collections by a number of other collectors. Really during his life, he evolves into a kind of human living repository of other people's natural history collections.</p>
  
  <p>James Delbourgo: Don't forget he's extremely wealthy for many reasons: Income from the Jamaica sugar plantations, salaries and various other things. He's very long lived. Lives to be 92. What that means is he is able to collect the collections of people who are friends and acquaintances. It almost becomes proverbial that in London, center of an expanding empire at this time in the early 18th century, if somebody pops off and they had a great collection, that collection should go just to the hand Sloane because he's already evolved into this holding operation, a guardian on behalf of the public. That idea of public access to collections doesn't really exist in the first half of the 18th century in a very robust way.</p>
  
  <p>James Delbourgo: He's one of the people that's going to invent that. There is something extraordinarily significant about the language in his will, which you have quoted, which then becomes the basis of the British Museum Act, which creates the British Museum as an institution where his collections along with certain others that get added to them will be publicly accessible in a very interesting way. Even more interesting is the reaction of many, not all, but many curators, early curators at the British Museum in the 18th century. They say to themselves, "Oh, my God. Now here comes the public. We've got to let the great unwashed in to see all these things. How are we going to do this? How are we going to manage this?" A number of them, and I quote the evidence in the book, are extremely vexed by the idea of what to them is a radical departure where we will allow the different classes and genders to mix in the museum.</p>
  
  <p>James Delbourgo: That was not an easy idea. That ran into... Sloane set this up and then he died. He didn't have to deal with it. The curators did, and they balked at it. That then becomes a much longer story of really what is a public institution? Who really does have what kind of access under what kind of conditions? It is always mediated inevitably. I think that's always a question worth asking, and it's a long story even to the current day. As we know, for example, the Metropolitan Museum in some sense is a descendant of the universal encyclopedic tradition in New York found in the 1870s has decided to introduce admission charges for people living outside New York state.</p>
  
  <p>James Delbourgo: The conditions of public access are never finally resolved and they can become more liberal or less liberal as time goes by, and I think that's a question that we all have to watch. I think Sloane is setting that up through his legacy in an extraordinary way and we are all to some extent I would say the heirs of such a tradition. But there's no guarantee that it will continue to liberalize. In fact, it may become subject to greater constraint and you could say that given the economic situation we're living in today, we are looking at potentially more constraint on our access to these public institutions.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>IDelbourgo's book is called Collecting the World: Hans Sloane and the Origins of the British Museum. It's a great read and you can find it in the show notes for this episode.</p>

<p>No surprise that I'm a huge fan of podcasts and I'm always interested in new ones. If you like Museum Archipelago, you should also download Museums in Strange Places, a podcast about Icelandic museums by Hannah Hethmon. Hannah was featured on Episode 33 of this show, talking about her work cataloging Icelandic museums. For new listeners, Hannah recommends starting with Episode 11 about how seals are saving Hvammstangi. Go find Museums in Strange Places wherever you subscribe to podcasts.</p>

<p>This has been Museum Archipelago. If you like the show, you can support me by joining Club Archipelago. In exchange for your support, you'll get access to a new premium audio feed that guides you further behind the scenes of museums. You can join the club by going to patreon.com/museumarchipelago or looking in the show notes for this episode. For more information or to submit feedback, go to museumarchipelago.com or museum_go on Twitter. Next time, bring a friend.</p>
        
        
        </div><p><a rel="payment" href="https://www.patreon.com/museumarchipelago">Support Museum Archipelago</a></p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Over the course of his long life, Hans Sloane collected tens of thousands of items which became the basis for what is today the British Museum. Funded in large part by his marriage into the enslaving plantocracy of Jamaica and the Atlantic slave trade, and aided by Britain’s rising colonial power and global reach, he assembled an encyclopedic collection of specimens and objects from all around the world.</p><p><a href="http://history.rutgers.edu/faculty-directory/307-delbourgo-james">James Delbourgo</a>, professor of History of Science and Atlantic World at Rutgers University, is the author of <em><a href="https://amzn.to/2uG0La8">Collecting the World: Hans Sloane and the Origins of the British Museum</a></em>. In this episode, Delbourgo describes Sloane’s formative years in Jamaica, how his collection was an attempt to catalogue the wonders and intricacies of a divine creation, and how the British Museum, which opened in 1759, came into being as a result of the terms Sloane laid down in his will. Delbourgo also discusses how Sloane’s idea of universal public access to his collections remains radical to this day.</p><p>Guest:<br /><a href="https://twitter.com/curiouseels?lang=en">James Delbourgo</a></p><p>Book:<br /><a href="https://amzn.to/2uG0La8"><em>Collecting the World: Hans Sloane and the Origins of the British Museum</em></a></p><p>Topics Discussed:<br />00:00: Intro<br />00:15: James Delbourgo<br />00:40:&nbsp;<a href="https://amzn.to/2uG0La8">Hans Sloane</a><br />02:10: Sloane in Jamaica<br />02:58:&nbsp;<a href="https://today.duke.edu/2016/06/musicalpassage">Earliest Transcription of African Music in the Americas</a><br />04:21: Sloane in London<br />06:58: Universal Public Access at the British Museum<br />10:40: Admission Charges at the Metropolitan Museum of Art <br />11:27:&nbsp;<a href="http://hhethmon.com/">Recommendation: Museums in Strange Places</a><br />12:00: Outro</p>

<p><em>Museum Archipelago is a tiny show guiding you through the rocky landscape of museums. Subscribe to the podcast via <a href="https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/museum-archipelago/id1182755184" rel="nofollow">Apple Podcasts</a>, <a href="https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubXVzZXVtYXJjaGlwZWxhZ28uY29tL3Jzcw==" rel="nofollow">Google Podcasts</a>, <a href="https://overcast.fm/itunes1182755184/museum-archipelago" rel="nofollow">Overcast</a>, <a href="https://open.spotify.com/show/5ImpDQJqEypxGNslnImXZE" rel="nofollow">Spotify</a>, or even <a href="https://museum.substack.com/" rel="nofollow">email</a> to never miss an episode.</em></p>

<div id="clubnew">
<h3><a href="https://www.patreon.com/museumarchipelago">Support Museum Archipelago🏖️</a></h3>
<div class="row">

  <div class="column right">Club Archipelago offers exclusive access to Museum Archipelago extras. It’s also a great way to support the show directly.
<p>
<a href="https://www.patreon.com/museumarchipelago"><strong>Join the Club for just $2/month.</a></strong></div>
<div class="column final">Your Club Archipelago membership includes:
<ul><li><strong>Access to a private podcast</strong> that guides you further behind the scenes of museums. Hear interviews, observations, and reviews that don’t make it into the main show;</li>
<li><strong>Archipelago at the Movies 🎟️</strong>, a bonus bad-movie podcast exclusively featuring movies that take place at museums;</li>
<li><strong>Logo stickers</strong>, pins and other extras, mailed straight to your door;</li>
<li><strong>A warm feeling</strong> knowing you’re supporting the podcast.</li>
</ul></div>
</div>

<p></div></p>

<p>
<h3>Transcript</h3>
Below is a transcript of Museum Archipelago episode 39. For more information on the people and ideas in the episode, refer to the links above.</p>

<div class="wrap-collabsible">
  <input id="collapsible" class="toggle" type="checkbox">
  <label for="collapsible" class="lbl-toggle">View Transcript</label>
  <div class="collapsible-content">
    <div class="content-inner">
    <div>
        
        <p>Welcome to Museum Archipelago. I'm Ian Elsner. Museum Archipelago is your audio guide through the landscape of museums. Each episode is never longer than 15 minutes, so let's get started.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>James Delbourgo: My name is James Delbourgo. I am a professor of history of science and the Atlantic world at Rutgers and I'm the author of a recent book, Collecting the World: Hans Sloane and the Origins of the British Museum. It's a book that tells the story of Hans Sloane and how the British Museum came into existence in the 1750s.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>Hans Sloane was born in the north of Ireland in 1660, and he moved to London at the age of 19. He trained as a botanist and as a physician.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>James Delbourgo: But in 1687, he becomes physician to the new governor of Jamaica, the Duke of Albemarle, and he set sail with Albemarle really for two reasons. Of course, this is in part fortune seeking and Sloane hopes to become wealthy by sailing to Jamaica, which is just at this time becoming intensively converted to slave labor and sugar cultivation. Sloane goes to Jamaica really when Jamaica is beginning its rises through sugar and slavery, what will become one of the most lucrative colonies of the British Empire in the 18th century. So he has material incentives, but also botanical incentives and medical incentives, hoping to find new drugs that Europeans don't yet know about and also hoping to collect, record, note down information about as many new exotic plants and potentially animal species as he can. It's a very particular moment where scientific ambition and personal ambition coincide with the opening up of these new lucrative island colonies in the Caribbean by the British through sugar and slavery at the end of the 17th century.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>In Jamaica, Sloane began writing his two-volume book, Natural History, and became deeply embedded with Indian slaving plantocracy.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>James Delbourgo: You have Sloane who is the friend of planters and will ultimately marry into a plantocracy by marrying a Jamaican widow by the name of Elizabeth Langley Rose from whom he receives money from sugar plantations that ultimately feed his collecting. Sloane is part of all of that, and indeed in his Natural History, he justifies and defends the use of violence to maintain the profitability of slavery.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>Sloane's Natural History was mostly a collection of what plants grow in Jamaica and what could be profitably extracted from the land. He took as much of it as he could to add to his growing collection. But it wasn't just plants.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>James Delbourgo: Also in that book, recorded on staves, extremely rare for this period, is musical notation that is a version of musical performance executed by enslaved west Africans in Jamaica in the late 17th century that Sloane claims to have witnessed. There are very few other travelers who go to these empirical lengths to record the music played by enslaved Africans and indeed to collect their instruments, which he does, and he brings their banjo like [inaudible]. That's the term he uses for them in his Natural History.</p>
  
  <p>James Delbourgo: There's an extraordinary contradiction or tension between acts of exploitation and acts of preservation. This is in no way to condone or justify or sympathize with those kinds of justifications for what was, of course, a brutal legalized stem of violence in the pursuit of profit. His curiosity is a very complex, generative curiosity because it is this universalistic form of natural history that has a reach into many different domains that will later become specialized in distinct in the 19th and in the 20th century.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>After he comes back to England, he never leaves again, and yet he continues collecting. Here he is, he has book wheels.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>James Delbourgo: Yes.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>Books upon books, which he's writing down, keeping track of all of this. He's doing so without a computer. He's doing so in a way that I think many of us who use computers all day are familiar with, but he's doing so in the context of the late 17th century. Did you ever have that thought when you were looking through his collection about how modern his problem was? His problem being, there's a lot of stuff that I need to catalog.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>James Delbourgo: Well, it did occur to me after a while. You're quite right, I think, to point to something that looks very familiar to us, which is the classification and the categorization of many different kinds of information. We attempt to manage this challenge electronically and Sloane attempted to manage this project on paper through correspondence, through applying paper labels with inked numbers to specimens and curiosities, putting them in certain parts of his house, which doubled as his private museum. Each number on each thing, linking them to an entry and a catalog. What these European naturalists saw themselves as doing was somehow cataloging the divine creation. There was a religious idea that there was a unity to the world that was a divine unity. That was a reflection of the omnipotence and wisdom and divine design.</p>
  
  <p>James Delbourgo: Of course, I didn't mean that somebody like Sloane was not also pursuing profit and interested in drugs and food stuffs that could be turned into commodities. That's absolutely the case at the same time so both of these things are true. And in that sense, the commercial management of global information, the global management of commodities reduced to short descriptions, this is not a bad way at all to characterize what Sloane was doing on paper. Something that goes on in our own time in electronic form so Sloane is part of a long history of that. But at the same time, he's also sorting what he sees as the creation into discreet catalogs of kinds of things as God designed them: fossils, birds, eggs, plants, fish, artificial curiosities, and so on and so forth. I</p>
</blockquote>

<p>I would like to turn my attention and my question to that legacy of founding the British Museum. How much of our understanding of a big museum like the British museum actually owes to this one sentence that Sloane wrote that he wanted his collection to be free and universally accessible and how much of a problem that was?</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>James Delbourgo: Well, you touch on an absolutely fundamental theme, which we could say is the theme of the public museum. Sloane, like many collectors, was very preoccupied with what would become of his life's work. He had already during the course of his lifetime absorbed collections by a number of other collectors. Really during his life, he evolves into a kind of human living repository of other people's natural history collections.</p>
  
  <p>James Delbourgo: Don't forget he's extremely wealthy for many reasons: Income from the Jamaica sugar plantations, salaries and various other things. He's very long lived. Lives to be 92. What that means is he is able to collect the collections of people who are friends and acquaintances. It almost becomes proverbial that in London, center of an expanding empire at this time in the early 18th century, if somebody pops off and they had a great collection, that collection should go just to the hand Sloane because he's already evolved into this holding operation, a guardian on behalf of the public. That idea of public access to collections doesn't really exist in the first half of the 18th century in a very robust way.</p>
  
  <p>James Delbourgo: He's one of the people that's going to invent that. There is something extraordinarily significant about the language in his will, which you have quoted, which then becomes the basis of the British Museum Act, which creates the British Museum as an institution where his collections along with certain others that get added to them will be publicly accessible in a very interesting way. Even more interesting is the reaction of many, not all, but many curators, early curators at the British Museum in the 18th century. They say to themselves, "Oh, my God. Now here comes the public. We've got to let the great unwashed in to see all these things. How are we going to do this? How are we going to manage this?" A number of them, and I quote the evidence in the book, are extremely vexed by the idea of what to them is a radical departure where we will allow the different classes and genders to mix in the museum.</p>
  
  <p>James Delbourgo: That was not an easy idea. That ran into... Sloane set this up and then he died. He didn't have to deal with it. The curators did, and they balked at it. That then becomes a much longer story of really what is a public institution? Who really does have what kind of access under what kind of conditions? It is always mediated inevitably. I think that's always a question worth asking, and it's a long story even to the current day. As we know, for example, the Metropolitan Museum in some sense is a descendant of the universal encyclopedic tradition in New York found in the 1870s has decided to introduce admission charges for people living outside New York state.</p>
  
  <p>James Delbourgo: The conditions of public access are never finally resolved and they can become more liberal or less liberal as time goes by, and I think that's a question that we all have to watch. I think Sloane is setting that up through his legacy in an extraordinary way and we are all to some extent I would say the heirs of such a tradition. But there's no guarantee that it will continue to liberalize. In fact, it may become subject to greater constraint and you could say that given the economic situation we're living in today, we are looking at potentially more constraint on our access to these public institutions.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>IDelbourgo's book is called Collecting the World: Hans Sloane and the Origins of the British Museum. It's a great read and you can find it in the show notes for this episode.</p>

<p>No surprise that I'm a huge fan of podcasts and I'm always interested in new ones. If you like Museum Archipelago, you should also download Museums in Strange Places, a podcast about Icelandic museums by Hannah Hethmon. Hannah was featured on Episode 33 of this show, talking about her work cataloging Icelandic museums. For new listeners, Hannah recommends starting with Episode 11 about how seals are saving Hvammstangi. Go find Museums in Strange Places wherever you subscribe to podcasts.</p>

<p>This has been Museum Archipelago. If you like the show, you can support me by joining Club Archipelago. In exchange for your support, you'll get access to a new premium audio feed that guides you further behind the scenes of museums. You can join the club by going to patreon.com/museumarchipelago or looking in the show notes for this episode. For more information or to submit feedback, go to museumarchipelago.com or museum_go on Twitter. Next time, bring a friend.</p>
        
        
        </div><p><a rel="payment" href="https://www.patreon.com/museumarchipelago">Support Museum Archipelago</a></p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
  </channel>
</rss>
