Materials contributed by Candace Greene  Department of Anthropology, Smithsonian  Founding Director, Summer Institute in Museum Anthropology    These materials are from a course that I teach as Adjunct Faculty for the Anthropology Department of  George Washington University. This is a graduate seminar that meets once a week for two hours. In  addition to grad students from Anthropology, there are usually students from Museum Studies and  sometimes from Museum Education. Enrollment is usually 12‐18 students. Almost all of the students  express a goal of museum employment in collections management, registration, exhibit development,  or other public programs. Only a few are preparing for a research career and planning to continue their  education past the MA. My goal for the course is to contribute to a museum work force that brings  anthropological thinking to all aspects of the job.     The collections used for the Assignment are in the Smithsonian’s Department of Anthropology, National  Museum of Natural History. However, I have also assembled additional materials for use in a classroom  setting. These are not accessioned and are not of much monetary value; most were purchased recently  from souvenir shops or thrift stores. Classwork with these objects is designed to prepare students to  successfully carry out an assignment using real museum collections.    The assignment included here is a semester‐long research project on various aspects of a historical  accession in the Dept. of Anthropology’s collections. These are real accessions that I do not research in  advance. You never know what information students will come up with, but it always seems to work  out. Students find it rewarding to work on real collections and to know that the information they  assemble will be added to museum records. The assignment results in a valued product as well as  serving as a useful learning process.    Students get a total of two hours in individual direct engagement with objects in the collection, an hour  each at two different points in the semester. This is the only that requires staff oversight. I manage this  through the use of a TA, usually a former collections intern, whom the Collections Manager has OK’d to  take visitors into storage. I accompany students on one of these visits to provide individual guidance in  how to look at objects. Students also visit various archives where they have the same access and  services provided to any researcher. No other museum staff time is required. At the conclusion of the  semester, useful reports (usually all of them) are added to our database as pdfs by either myself or the  TA. Sometimes I also extract information to correct or enhance particular data fields. Students are  justifiably proud of their contributions.    MATERIALS POSTED      Syllabus with topics and readings      Assignment,   Instructions  on resources to check                                                                                                                                                                                                                    Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. States of America. They are shared under the terms of a Creative and shared here were produced by Candace Greene in the United Anthropology in the Museum course materials described above License Tool Kit #3 (some major online databases for anthropology) Tool Kit #2 (literature on material objects) Tool Kit #1 (biographical research on donors/collectors) Guide to Collection Records (Smithsonian specific) How to Cite Collection Records (SI oriented but could be applied widely) Useful Reference Things Provided to Students Collecting Factors (assembled from class discussion) Handout of information flow relating to museum catalog information Key Terms and Concepts (originally a Powerpoint) Exercise for students to assemble information – the kuspak Materials for individual lessons ANTHRO 6201    Spring 2018  George Washington University Instructor: Dr. Candace Greene Anthropology 6201.01 Spring 2018 Wed. 6:10 – 8:00, NMNH ANTHROPOLOGY IN THE MUSEUM Week 1 Jan. 17 Getting acquainted; goals and core concepts of the course Ulrich, L.T., I. Gaskell, S. J. Schechner, and S.A. Carter 2015 Selections from, Tangible Things: Making History Through Objects. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [demonstration of ways we’ll think about objects through the course] HOW COLLECTIONS TAKE SHAPE IN THE PAST… Week 2 Jan. 24 Just what is a museum anyway? Banks, Marcus 2001 Reading Pictures. In Visual Methods in Social Research, by Marcus Banks. Pp. 1-12. Sage Publications Limited. [consider the evident surface of objects against evidence of their history] Gosden, Chris and Frances Larson 2007 What is a Museum? In Knowing Things: Exploring the Collections at the Pitt Rivers Museum, 1884-1945, by Chris Gosden and Frances Larson. Pp. 1-13. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [think about museums as sets of networks among people] Pearce, Susan M. 1994 Introduction. In Interpreting Objects and Collections. S. Pearce, ed. Pp. 1- 6. New York: Routledge. [think about all the things out there in the world, and the sub-set in the museum] Thomas, Nicholas 2010 The Museum as Method. Museum Anthropology 33(1): 6-10. (Available for download through Aladin) [consider alternative perspectives of moving from questions to objects, or from objects to questions] Week 3 Jan. 31 Says who? Documentation and Attribution Greene, Candace S. ANTHRO 6201    Spring 2018  1992 Attribution, Documentation, and the Ideal Type. In Art and Artifacts: Essays in Material Culture and Museum Studies in Honor of Jane Powell Dwyer. H. Juli, ed. Pp. 9-17. Brown University Research Papers in Anthropology, 5. Providence: Brown University. [focus on the concepts bound up in attribution and documentation] Sturtevant, William C. 1966 Ethnographic Collections and Curatorial Records. Museum News 44(7): 16-19. [consider what issues computerization has and hasn’t resolved in 50+ years] Guide to Collections Records, Ethnology and Archaeology Collections. Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History, Department of Anthropology. [read this one carefully; keep it for continual reference] Week 4 Feb. 7 Surely there must be more…: Enhancing Museum Records Grafe, Steven 2001 Walking in Strange Gardens: Early Floral Design in the Columbia River Plateau, by Steven Grafe. In Painters, Patrons, and Identity: Essays in Native American Art to Honor J.J. Brody. Joyce M. Szabo, ed. Pp. 263-280. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. [look at how he gathered information, how he used it to construct collection history] Hollinger, Eric R. 2003 Inventory and Assessment of Human Remains and Funerary Objects Potentially Affiliated with the Menominee Tribe in the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution. Unpublished report, Repatriation Office, NMNH. [Focus on pages 21-47. Make a list of the types of sources used – with awesome results] Norcini, Marilyn 2008 Frederick Johnson’s ‘River Desert Algonquin’ Materials at the University of Pennsylvania Museum: A Collection History, by Marilyn Norcini. Museum Anthropology 31(2):122-147. (available for download through Aladin) [look at types of information gathered to support an intellectual history] Week 5 Feb. 14 How did they end up here? Building Context of Collecting O’Hanlon, Michael. 2000 Introduction. In Hunting the Gatherers: Ethnographic Collectors, Agents, and Agency in Melanesia, 1870s-1930s. Michael O'Hanlon and Robert Welsch, eds. Pp. 1-34. New York: Berghahn Books. [think about how collecting was influenced – before, during, after “the scene”] Van der Grijp, Paul ANTHRO 6201    Spring 2018  2014 The Sacred Gift: Donations from Private Collectors to Public Museums. Museum Anthropology Review, 8(1): 22-44. [read this for a focus on donors as major agents] Bell, Joshua A. 2013 "The Sorcery of Sweetness: Intersecting Agencies and Materialities of the 1928 USDA Sugarcane Expedition to New Guinea," pp. 117-141. In, Reassembling the Collection: Ethnographic Museums and Indigenous Agency, ed. R. Harrison, S. Byrne, and A. Clarke. School for Advanced Research Press. Santa Fe. [read this for a focus on members of the source community as major agents] Morphy, Howard 2015 The Displaced Local: Multiple Agency in the Building of Museums’ Ethnographic Collections. Pp. 365-387. The International Handbooks of Museum Studies: Museum Theory. Wiley; London. [the subtitle says it all – multiple agency] Week 6 Feb. 21 Artifacts at Home: Understanding Context of Production and Use Banerjee, Mukulika and Daniel Miller 2003 Mina’s Story. In The Sari, by Mukulika Banerjee and Daniel Miller. Pp. 11-19. New York: Berg. [think about the complex sentiments of a person using an object] Rhoads, Bernadine, Herwona Toyebo and Beatrice Ahpeahtone Doyah Smith 2000 Gifts of Pride and Love: Kiowa and Comanche Cradles. B. Hail, ed. Selections: Keintaddle, pp. 88-93; My Grandmother Guohaddle, pp. 52-57. Bristol: Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology, Brown University. [think about the types of information people can provide about heritage objects] Ettawageshik, Frank 1999 My Father’s Business. In Unpacking Cultures: Art and Commodity in Colonial and Postcolonial Worlds. Phillips and Steiner, eds. Pp. 20-31. Berkeley: University of California Press. [think about whether tourist goods are lesser goods, or just different goods] Week 7 Feb. 28 Learning to Look (and look up) Greene, Candace S. 1992 Attribution, Documentation, and the Ideal Type. In Art and Artifacts: Essays in Material Culture and Museum Studies in Honor of Jane Powell Dwyer. H. Juli, ed. Pp. 9-17. Brown University Research Papers in Anthropology, 5. Providence: Brown University. [revisit this article from Wk. 3, focusing here on the process of attribution] Greene, Candace S. ANTHRO 6201    Spring 2018  1992 Soft Cradles of the Central Plains. Plains Anthropologist 37 (139): 95-113. [look at steps in identification, examining construction and embellishment] Hooper, Steven 2005 On Looking at a Tahitian God House. Journal of Museum Ethnography 17: 89- 100. [another systematic process of learning from close and serious observation] Week 8 Mar. 7 Connected Lives: Chaîne opératoire Martinón-Torres, Marcos 2002 ‘Chaîne opératoire.’ The concept and its applications within the study of technology. Gallaecia 21: 29-43. [Good introduction to chaîne opératoire; use this as a way to think about the method and how it might be applied to your own objects of study] Coupaye, Ludovic 2009 Ways of Enchanting: Chaînes Opératoires and Yam Cultivation in Nyamikum Village, Maprik, Papua New Guinea. Journal of Material Culture 14 (4): 433–458. [Further discussion of the method within an ethnographic frame] Munn, Nancy D. 1977 The spatiotemporal transformations of Gawa canoes. Journal de la Société des Océanistes 33: 39-51. [OPTIONAL BACKGROUND: Semiotic and structural analysis of a canoe that usefully points outward from the object into the world] ------------------------------------------Mar. 14: SPRING BREAK-------------------------------------- Week 9 Mar. 21 Collections Visits – No Class Meeting …AND CARRY MEANING IN THE PRESENT Week 10 Mar. 28 Record Systems: Putting Things Into Boxes Turner, Hannah 2016 Critical Histories of Museum Catalogues. Museum Anthropology 39: 102-110. (Available for download through Aladin) [new thinking about the power of infrastructure to shape our thinking] Newell, Jenny ANTHRO 6201    Spring 2018  2012 Old Objects, new media: Historical collections, digitization and affect. Journal of Material Culture 17(3): 287-306. [use this article to think through the place of online images as surrogates] Phillips, Ruth and Christopher Steiner 1999 Art, Authenticity, and the Baggage of Cultural Encounter. In Unpacking Cultures: Art and Commodity in Colonial and Postcolonial Worlds. Phillips and Steiner, eds. Pp. 3-19. Berkeley: University of California Press. [the biggest issue of “fit” – consider what gets into what type of museum] Pearce, Susan M. 1994 Introduction. In Interpreting Objects and Collections. S. Pearce, ed. Pp. 1- 6. New York: Routledge. [revisit this one from Wk 2, think again about all the things out there in the world, and the sub-set in the museum] Banks, Marcus 2001 Reading Pictures. In Visual Methods in Social Research, by Marcus Banks. Pp. 1-12. Sage Publications Limited. [revisit this one from Wk 2, now considering image versus object] Week 11 April 4 Repatriation: Applying Knowledge to NAGPRA Hollinger, Eric R., Betsy Bruemmer and Anne-Marie Victor-Howe 2005 Assessment of Tlingit Objects Requested for Repatriation as Objects of Cultural Patrimony and Sacred Objects in the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution. Unpublished report, Repatriation Office, NMNH. This will be provided in hard copy. Focus on pages 1-25. [look esp. at complexity of determining communal property and right of possession] NAGPRA, law and regulations, available at http://www.cr.nps.gov/nagpra/ Week 12 April 11 Who Cares? Identity, Ownership, & “Museumification” Ames, Michael 1992 Cannibal Tours, Glass Boxes, and the Politics of Interpretation. In Cannibal Tours and Glass Boxes: The Anthropology of Museums, by M. Ames. Pp. 139-150. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press. [an early wakeup call on the politics of representing “others”] Leopold, Robert 2013 Articulating Culturally Sensitive Knowledge Online: A Cherokee Case Study. Museum Anthropology Review 7(1-2): 85-104. [issues and challenges in the domain of cultural privacy] ANTHRO 6201    Spring 2018  McMullen, Ann 2008 The Currency of Consultation and Collaboration. Museum Anthropology Review 3(2): 54-87. [on-the-ground examination of cultural politics of “doing the right thing”] Week 13 April 18 Visiting with the Dead: Physical Anthropology Week 14 April 25 Student Presentations FINAL REPORTS DUE: MAY 4 ANTH 6201, GWU Prof. C. Greene Spring 2017 1 Anthropology in the Museum COLLECTIONS ASSIGNMENT Each student will select an accession that will be the basis for an ongoing assignment over the course of the semester, with interim reports due periodically. Week 1 January 18 Select a collection from the list of options. Schedule an appointment with the teaching assistant to go to the Museum Support Center to examine your collection. Register your visit, using the online visitor request system, available at http://anthropology.si.edu. Week 2 January 25 Due: Written homework Using two commonly accessible reference sources, locate basic, preliminary information on the cultural designation under which material in your collection is cataloged. Establish the general geographic location; identify alternate names that may have been applied to this culture. Consider who lives in that location now. * Prepare a one-paragraph written summary, citing sources used. * Include a regional map with the collecting location marked. Choose a scale appropriate to the locality to be indicated. Week 4 February 8 Due: Interim Report #1 Assemble all associated information in Smithsonian records. Check for: accession files; parts of the accession that may have been dispersed among Smithsonian units; other accessions from the same donor or collector; museum annual reports. Check across SI databases for field notes, correspondence files, or photographs in various SI archives. When viewing your collection, look for tags or writing on objects. Make copies of relevant documents for continued reference. * Prepare a narrative summary of the information, citing all sources. * Conclude the summary with an assessment of whether the catalog information is based on documentation received with the collection or attribution assigned by the museum. Week 7 March 1 By this week, select an item from your accession for further research to be presented in Interim #3. Schedule an appointment with the professor to examine it and to look at comparative material. * Use the online databases to assemble a list of other things you would like to examine for comparative purposes. * Provide a list of identifying numbers and a statement of what search parameters you used. Week 8 March 8 Due: Interim Report #2 Part I. ANTH 6201, GWU Prof. C. Greene Spring 2017 2 Enhance the documentation through research and analyze it. Prepare a report of your findings including these elements: * Trace the provenance of both objects and information; * Assemble information on the donor, collector, and any others involved; * Assess their knowledge and intellectual perspective. * Evaluate the reliability of the original documentation based on new information that you have found. Part II. Enhance understanding of the collection by examining the context of collecting. * Assemble information on the place of origin at that time period. * Describe the cultural, economic, and political framework within which the collection was assembled, taking into account the perspectives of both the source community and the collectors. * Consider how these factors might have shaped the collection. Week 11 April 5 Due: Interim Report #3 Prepare information about the object itself. Become familiar with the materials, techniques, and designs. Locate comparative information about similar objects, using published sources, online museum catalogs, and on-site visits to Smithsonian collections. * Analyze how your object compares to these. Research the meaning of the object within the culture of origin, using anthropological source materials. * Explain the cultural context of objects of this type. * Indicate if this has changed over time. Evaluate museum records about the collection based on your research. * Assess if your findings challenge or support the catalog record. * Consider both ethnic identification and function. Week 12 April 12 Due: Interim Report #4 NAGPRA applies only to Native American materials from the U.S. However, the issues that the law requires museums to address in considering repatriation claims are relevant for understanding collections from anywhere in the world. For your collection or a selected item, apply the research you have already done to address three critical issues: * cultural affiliation (who could assert a cultural connection?) * cultural context (does the collection contain human remains; funerary objects; objects of cultural patrimony; or sacred objects, as defined by NAGPRA?) ANTH 6201, GWU Prof. C. Greene Spring 2017 3 * right of possession (was title legally transferred? are there other legal or ethical issues?) If you do not have enough information to fully address all issues, indicate what more you would need to know and how you would go about finding it out. Week 13 April 19 Due: Interim Report #5 Develop two different idea statements (1-2 pages each) for thought-provoking exhibits that could include one or more objects from your selected collection. Show how these relate to concepts that have been addressed in this course. Week 15 May 5 Due: Final Collections Report The final report will be a compilation of the five interim assignments from the semester. Students are encouraged to revise their previous work to take advantage of additional information discovered, comments on earlier submissions, and their increased understanding of issues in museum anthropology. In addition, prepare two short summaries based on your research to be added to the collections database, using the format provided. One will be a biographical sketch of the donor and/or collector; the other will be a short history of the accession. ANTH 6201, GWU Prof. C. Greene Spring 2017 1 Guidelines and Instructions for Collections Assignment    These are real collections! Results may vary!  I have not researched these in advance, so I don’t know how hard or easy different parts of  the assignment will be. Students will have varying success in finding information. This may  make particular parts of the assignment more or less fun, but it will not affect your grade as  long as you can fully document the strategies that you developed to seek information and the  sources that you consulted. Even negative information can be useful to future researchers,  and should be included in the formal collection report.    The information that you assemble for assignments 1 through 3 will be added to the  museum’s permanent records. Write for posterity. Your name is going to be on this for a long  time.  - think of it as a professional report, not a school paper  - report results; save comments on your research experiences to share in class  - use clear, simple language  - provide complete information: complete citations for published works; full designations  for repositories, and clear citations for unpublished material; full names and position titles  for individuals; no acronyms without full explanations.   - check spellings and correct typographical errors.  - internet sources can be unstable; identify the source clearly in addition to giving the URL  and the date accessed. If there is a physical edition, cite that first, noting that you  consulted an electronic edition.  - think about someone reading this decades from now. Will it still make sense?    Interim reports: Submit interim reports in hard copy and also electronically as an email  attachment. Include a cover sheet with the accession number and your name, email address,  and date on each interim. Give your report page numbers. For assignments 1 and 2, include  copies of key documentation for review. Interim reports will be graded and marked with  suggestions for improvement if needed. I will return them in time for revisions to be  incorporated into the final Collection Report. I prefer text files in Word; if you wish to use  another program, check with me regarding format.    Final reports: Submit final reports in hard copy as well as in electronic form. Material must be  submitted in a form that will facilitate inclusion into museum records.  Electronic versions: Submit through Blackboard. Assignments #4 and 5 should be clearly  separated.   Hard copy versions: Clean copies on good quality standard paper are required; use paper clips if  necessary but do not staple. Every page should be clearly marked with the accession number  and other designations as needed to retain their order.     ANTH 6201, GWU Prof. C. Greene Spring 2017 2 Material in assignments #1 ‐ 3 of the final Collection Report may be added to the Department of  Anthropology collection files. It also may be added to the online collections database. Your  name will be included as the source of information unless other arrangements are made with  the instructor.    ANTH 6201, GWU Prof. C. Greene Spring 2017 3 Smithsonian Sources for Collection Information    Information on collections may be dispersed among different parts of the  Smithsonian, each with its own database and appointment system. Here’s a list of  some key resources with information on how to find information about what  they have and how to arrange a visit.    Dept. of Anthropology – Collections Section  Website  The collections website (http://anthropology.si.edu/cm/index.htm) provides  links to the online catalog and to a useful Guide to Collection Records. You can access  the Visitor Request system from here to make appointments, and can view various  exhibits that may relate to your collection. Explore this one!     Online Catalog  EMu is the database for the Anthropology object catalog. A public version is   accessible at http://collections.nmnh.si.edu/search/anth/. It provides access to some  but not all of the catalog data, and little of the accession data. For Interim #1, the TA will  check the non‐public database for other relevant information and will send any  information found. You will use the online database as a major resource to locate  comparative material for Interim #3.    Vertical files  Recent information contributed by researchers about accessions or objects may  be available in paper files kept by the Collections Management section. (This is where  paper copies of your reports will be filed.)  The TA will check this source for you or you  can do so yourself when you are at MSC.    In Person  Visits to the collection are week days by appointment, scheduled through the  online Visitor Request system. The TA will handle visits for students enrolled in the  course. Almost all of the archaeology and ethnology collections of the Department of  Anthropology are held at the Museum Support Center in Suitland, Maryland, accessible  via a free Smithsonian shuttle. A small number of items are in the Natural History  Museum on the Mall, either on exhibit or adjacent to curatorial offices.    Dept. of Anthropology ‐ National Anthropological Archives (NAA)  Online catalog    SIRIS is the online catalog for all Smithsonian archives as well as  Smithsonian libraries. It is available at http://www.siris.si.edu. NAA listings are under  the heading for Archival, Manuscript, and Photographic Collections. You can restrict  searches to just the NAA or search all participating Smithsonian archives. The NAA has  extensive photographic collections in addition to manuscript materials. Lots of great  documentation and contextual photos here.    ANTH 6201, GWU Prof. C. Greene Spring 2017 4 Website  The NAA website includes a number of finding aids to the collection and may  include information that is not available in SIRIS.  It is available at  http://www.nmnh.si.edu/naa/.     In person  The collections of the archives are available by appointment only Tuesday‐ Friday from 9 to 4:30. Appointments are made separately from the object collection;  schedule through the NAA’s online request system.  The NAA is located in the Museum  Support Center in Suitland, Maryland, the same building as the object collection.   Information is available on the website.    Smithsonian Institution Archives  Accession files  Original accession records (prior to 1958) are available in the SI Archives. The SI  Archives also has indices to correspondence files and other holdings that may relate to  collections. It is located just off the Mall in the Capitol Gallery building (next to L’Enfant  Metro stop) and is open 9‐5 M‐F. You should contact them in advance for an  appointment. E‐mail is osiaref@si.edu. See their website for further information ‐  http://www.si.edu/archives.     Other resources The SI Archives maintains extensive collections of manuscript material relating  to Smithsonian history, which may include information on donors. Various finding aids  and databases are available online; see listings on their website, including links to SIRIS,  the archive and library database.    National Museum of Natural History – Office of the Registrar  Accession files  Original accession records (and additions) since 1958 are maintained in this  office. Records for accessions prior to that date are available on microfilm. Card indexes  of donor names are available. This office is located in the Natural History Museum on  the Mall, and researcher space is very limited. Records are available by appointment  only ‐ telephone 202‐633‐1630.     Smithsonian Collections Search Center    This system searches across all of the Smithsonian databases that are online. It is  available at http://collections.si.edu. It can be a great way to find unexpected resources. Be  certain to expand the left sidebar entry for Catalog Record Source to see which Smithsonian  repositories are represented and to filter your results. Some resources, such as the National  Museum of the American Indian, do not have all their records online. Even when there is an  online record, no repository includes all information in those online records.     Smithsonian Institution Libraries    The Smithsonian has many specialized libraries with extensive holdings that may be of  value in your research.  If you cannot find a book at GW, you can consult the library section of  ANTH 6201, GWU Prof. C. Greene Spring 2017 5 SIRIS to see what is available at the SI. Collections are open to anyone week days by  appointment for on‐site use, but materials can be checked out only by staff. Information on the  library system is available at http://www.sil.si.edu.       The reference staff of the Anthropology Branch of the SI Library is specially trained in  this field, highly knowledgeable, and very helpful. If you are having trouble locating books or  articles on your topic, they will be glad to provide assistance. The Anthropology Branch is one of  the best places anywhere for literature about objects!          YIKES – SO MANY SOURCES!    Indeed, the Smithsonian is big and can be confusing. Check out the exhibit we developed to help  researchers ‐ Accessing Anthropology: Online Databases and Other Resources – available at  http://anthropology.si.edu/accessinganthropology/understanding/index.html.         1    C. Greene 2017  I use this exercise at the start of a course to introduce a range of ideas and skills  and to encourage discussion.     Kuspak Exercise        Course goals reminder:    ‐ become familiar with the nature of collections and their history    ‐ develop research skills (finding information)    ‐ develop analytical skills (evaluating information)    ‐ become familiar with issues (museums as politicized sites)    Start by quickly assembling info that might be in an accession file;   ‐ interview the donor (me);   (introduce terms: donor/collector)  ‐ look at the object/collection;   ‐ secure any written documents    INTERVIEW – SECURING BASIC INFORMATION ABOUT ACQUISITION  Amazingly fortunate to be able to interview field collector and to get such a well  documented object. (encourage questions to elicit following information)    2    C. Greene 2017  Acquired in Alaska in Oct 2007, in shop with Native crafts on Edgerton  Highway, Copper River area; Ahtna are the Native group in area      I was told: maker is probably Eskimo (some uncertainty), lives in Wasilla    I observed similar for sale in tourist shops, also Native Health Center          Why did I get one? Why this one? tell about transaction      (issues of cost; transportation)      Assess my reliability, my motivations, my understanding      why there? my level of knowledge?      how long ago – issue of memory, or written receipt?    RESEARCH SKILLS – ASSEMBLING MORE INFORMATION  Move on to catalog – or use for interpretation, research – good to have more    Three or four working groups to research various aspects:    set up, then give suggested questions below    1)  MAKER – Aggie Bostrom, as ID’d on sewn in tag    ‐ her ethnic affiliations    ‐ where does she live, what does that tell us    ‐ her relationship to the market; what she’s “selling” (culture)    2)  OBJECT – kuspak, as ID’d on sales receipt    ‐ cultural context    ‐ community use or tourist item only    ‐ tied to a given ethnicity; gender; age?    ‐ everyday wear, special occasion, symbol of ethnicity (national dress)    3) PLACE –based on location of shop, based on receipt    ‐ who’s there, who else is there, useful for catalog ID?    ‐ Copper River area; Wasilla; Tonsina co‐op address  3    C. Greene 2017    ‐ place ‐> ethnicity (Ahtna? Eskimo?)    ‐ fixed map vs mobility/modernity    4) ETHNIC ORIGINS  – Ahtna, based on map; or Eskimo, as told to me    ‐ different Native groups in Alaska (Indian, Eskimo, Aleut)    ‐ issues with ethnonyms (Eskimo vs Inuit or Inupiat and Yupik)      Alaskan usage vs Canadian usage    ANALYTICAL SKILLS, RECOGNITION OF POLITICAL ISSUES    Reports from groups:    ‐ summary of info followed by discussion of issues raised    ‐     discussion of:      ‐ best sources of info: scholarly, popular, Native voice      ‐ mobility of people and objects and styles      ‐ commodification of culture      ‐ politics of terminology      ‐ questions of cultural appropriation    OVERVIEW OF KEY TERMS AND  CONCEPTS C. Greene 2016 SAYS WHO? Interrogating Records C. Greene 2016 PROVENIENCE PROVENANCE C. Greene 2016 PROVENIENCE • Anthropology/Archaeology PROVENANCE • Art History/ Art Market C. Greene 2016 PROVENIENCE • Anthropology/Archaeology • where collected • identified to a group • document of culture • “authenticity” PROVENANCE • Art History/ Art Market • chain of ownership • artist who made it • value as a commodity • “authenticity” C. Greene 2016 DOCUMENTATION ATTRIBUTION C. Greene 2016 DOCUMENTATION External evidence ATTRIBUTION Internal evidence C. Greene 2016 DOCUMENTATION Examples of  External evidence • Letter from collector • Field notes • Sales receipt • Oral tradition ATTRIBUTION Examples of Internal evidence • Inscription • Distinctive motif • Stylistic elements • Technical traits C. Greene 2016 DOCUMENTATION External evidence • Letter from collector • Field notes • Sales receipt • Oral tradition ATTRIBUTION Internal evidence • Inscription • Distinctive motif • Stylistic elements • Technical traits NOT THE MUSEUM  CATALOG! C. Greene 2016 DOCUMENTATION Point in it’s life :  where acquired Makers and users are same Objects don’t travel Over‐reliance: false picture of diversity ATTRIBUTION Point in it’s life:  where made Cultural conformity (everyone thinks the same) Cultures are bounded Over‐reliance: deny diversity, change ASSUMPTIONS BEHIND EACH METHOD C. Greene 2016 DOCUMENTATION SKILLS • NAVIGATING MUSEUM  RECORDS: putting it back  together again • ENHANCING RECORDS:  researching collectors • CRITICAL EVALUATION  C. Greene 2016 ATTRIBUTION SKILLS • LEARNING TO LOOK • FINDING COMPARATIVE  MATERIAL • TECHNICAL ANALYSIS C. Greene 2016 WHERE ARE ALL THE  PEOPLE? LOOKING FOR PEOPLE, IN  THE RELATIONAL MUSEUM C. Greene 2016 OBJECT(S) C. Greene 2016 C. Greene 2016 OBJECT COLLECTION C. Greene 2016 OBJECT Catalog level info COLLECTION Accession level info C. Greene 2016 OBJECT COLLECTING EVENT COLLECTION C. Greene 2016 OBJECT COLLECTING EVENT COLLECTION ENTER THE PEOPLE C. Greene 2016 OBJECT COLLECTING EVENT COLLECTION CONTEXT OF TIME AND PLACE C. Greene 2016 OBJECT COLLECTING EVENT COLLECTION Individual & Cultural Ideas Individual & Cultural Ideas CONTEXT OF TIME AND PLACE C. Greene 2016 OBJECT COLLECTING EVENT COLLECTION IT’LL LOOK GREAT  ON THE WALL (or  in a case)! Individual & Cultural Ideas CONTEXT OF TIME AND PLACE C. Greene 2016 OBJECT COLLECTING EVENT COLLECTION Individual & Cultural Ideas CASH FOR THIS   JUNK! CONTEXT OF TIME AND PLACE C. Greene 2016 OBJECT COLLECTING EVENT COLLECTION Positivist scientific  paradigm Regimes of intellectual  property CONTEXT OF TIME AND PLACE C. Greene 2016 THE BIG COLLECTING EVENT BEFORE THE COLLECTING EVENT AFTER THE COLLECTING EVENT ADD TIME DIMENSION C. Greene 2016 THE BIG COLLECTING EVENT BEFORE THE COLLECTING EVENT AFTER THE COLLECTING EVENT ADD TIME DIMENSION Source person or  community Source meets Collector Collector to museum donor C. Greene 2016 THE BIG COLLECTING EVENT BEFORE THE COLLECTING EVENT AFTER THE COLLECTING EVENT C. Greene 2016 Snap Review  Provenience and Provenance  Documentation and Attribution  Object and Collection  Catalog and Accession  Donor and Collector  Collector and Source C. Greene 2016 ACCESSION FILE Inventory Info #1 catalog ledger #2 catalog cards #3 catalog database #4 catalog database #5 catalog database (EMu) HISTORY OF THE ANTHROPOLOGY CATALOG public database (selective entry) Analog files (for storage plans) (selective output) ANTHROPOLOGY catalog database (EMu) Staff access only SMITHSONIAN DATABASES ANTHROPOLOGY public database collections.nmnh.si.edu/search/anth/ COLLECTIONS  SEARCH  CENTER collections.si.edu NMAI public database (partial) nmai.si.edu/searchcollections/ SIRIS (NAA, SIA, LIBRARIES) siris.si.edu C. Greene 2016 Week 5 How Did They End Up Here? - Notes from Class Discussions CONTEXT OF COLLECTING Motivations: How People Shape a Collection COLLECTOR SOURCE Trade as form of cultural contact and exchange (inc. gift exchange) Trade as form of cultural contact and exchange (inc. gift exchange) Exotic goods - souvenir Exchange for exotic goods Academic/scientific Salvage ethnography Preservation of heritage materials Evidence of conversion (missionary success) Proof of one’s conversion to Christianity (or other religion) Trophy of conquest Tragic loss Curiosity about others Curiosity about others Aesthetic appeal of “specimen” Aesthetic appeal of trade goods To gain personal prestige/status in home community To gain personal prestige/status in home community Advance national prestige (political competition) Advance national prestige (ethnic pride) (competition w others for control of trade) Gain control over people economically Gain control over people magically Competition with other collectors Competition with other sellers/traders C. Greene 2016 Week 5 How Did They End Up Here? - Notes from Class Discussions $$$$$$ economic incentive $$$$$$ economic incentive Ritual disposal (“riddance”) Economic disposal of discarded goods “modernization” To acquire better technology Forced into exchange or acceptance of collecting practices C. Greene 2016 Week 5 How Did They End Up Here? - Notes from Class Discussions In this exercise in class discussion following up on readings, students are asked to suggest things that might have motivated either a collector or the person from whom material was received. These are noted on the board under two columns (clever students might demand more columns). Discussion of an item in either column can trigger consideration of what might go into the other one. These notes, requested by students for later reference, provide a cleaned-up record of ideas brought up in class. Smithsonian  Institution   National  Museum  of  Natural  History   Department  of  Anthropology      HOW  TO  CITE  COLLECTION  OBJECTS  AND  RECORDS    The  Anthropology  Collection  was  one  of  the  earliest  Smithsonian  collections,  dating  to  the  establishment  of  the  United  States  National  Museum  (USNM)  in  1858.  For  an  overview  of  records  systems,  see  the  Guide  to  Collection  Records.  These  systems  all  began  as  paper  files.  Many  are  now  available  in  electronic  or  microfilm  form,  which  can  make  citation  confusing.    These  are  some  guidelines  to  help  with  citations.      Citations  should  always  indicate  that  the  material  is  in  the  National  Museum  of  Natural  History  (once  the  USNM)  Department  of  Anthropology,  Smithsonian  Institution.       OBJECTS  Objects  should  be  referenced  by  individual  catalog  number  prefaced  by  the  letter  A,  E,  or  P  to  identify  whether  it  is  in  the  Archaeology,  Ethnology,  or  Physical  Anthropology  division.  Numbers  range  from  1  to  almost  600,000;  many  are  duplicated  across  the  divisions,  making  the  prefix  important.  The  electronic  database  uses  leading  zeroes  as  necessary  to  reach  six  digits,  and  does  not  accept    the  commas  that  are  used  in  the  paper  records.    Many  items  have  attached  tags  with  an  extension  after  the  catalog  number,  such  as  -­‐0  or  -­‐2.  These  extensions  are  for  internal  management  purposes  and  may  change  over  time.  They  should  not  usually  be  included  in  citations.         CATALOG  RECORDS  The  catalog  exists  in  three  forms:  original  ledger  books,  catalog  cards,  and  an  electronic  database,  which  includes  images  of  many  of  the  cards.  Cite  the  source  from  which  you  obtained  information.  The  paper  forms  are  stable  and  can  be  cited  without  noting  the  date  they  were  viewed.  The  database  is  frequently  changed  and  updated,  making  it  important  to  include  the  date  it  was  consulted.      Examples:  Catalog  ledger  entry  for  E154,064,  Dept  of  Anthropology  ,  NMNH,  Smithsonian.    Catalog  card  for  E154,064,  Dept  of  Anthropology,  NMNH,  Smithsonian.    If  you  view  the  card  online,  add:  Accessed  online  1/15/2013.     Catalog  database  entry  for  E154064,    Dept  of  Anthropology,  NMNH,  Smithsonian.  Accessed  1/15/13.       ACCESSION  FILES  These  records  exist  in  three  forms:  original  paper  files,  duplicate  microfilm  copies  in  multiple  repositories,  and  selected  information  in  the  online  database.  Cite  the  source  consulted.  Paper  accession  files    in  the  SI  Archives  should  be  cited  by  their  Record    Unit  number  (RU305)  plus  reference  to  the  accession  number  of  the  particular  file  consulted.  This  is  a  stable  unit  of  information  and  date  accessed  need  not  be  cited.  More  recent  accession  files  are  active  and  changing;  the  citation  should  include  the  repository,  the  accession  number,  and  the  date  of  access.  The  microfilm,  wherever  viewed,  is  a  duplicate  of  the  SIA  originals;  reference  to  place  and  date  of  access  is  not  needed.  The  electronic  database  is  a  unique  and  changing  source  of  information;  note  the  source  and  the  date  accessed.      Examples:  [original  file]  Accession  1267,  Papers  of  the  USNM  Office  of  the  Registrar,  RU  305,  Smithsonian  Institution  Archives.    [microfilm  of  original  file]  Accession  1267,  Papers  of  the  USNM  Office  of  the  Registrar,  RU  305,  Smithsonian  Institution  Archives.  Accessed  on  microfilm.    [original  file]  Accession  235,607.  Office  of  the  Registrar,  NMNH,  Smithsonian  Institution.  Accessed  1/15/13.    [online  database]  Accession  235067,  Dept  of  Anthropology,  NMNH,  Smithsonian  Institution.  Accessed  online  1/15/13.    [database  report  provided  by  Collections  Management]  Accession  001267,  Dept  of  Anthropology,  NMNH,  Smithsonian  Institution.  Report  provided  by  Dept  of  Anthropology,  dated  1/15/13.       OTHER  FILES  Miscellaneous  information  received  by  Collections  Management  is  kept  in  vertical  files  organized  by  accession  number.    Cite  unique  material,  such  as  original  tags,  by  this  source.  Cite  published  and  duplicate  material  by  original  source.      Example:  Catalog  E154,064.  Original  collector’s  tag.  Located  in  vertical  file  for  accession  235,067,  Collections  Management  records,  Dept  of  Anthropology,  NMNH,  Smithsonian  Institution.     January  2013   National Museum of Natural History Department of Anthropology Guide to Collections Records The research value of the collections is enhanced by a wealth of supporting documentation assembled over 150 years by numerous donors, collectors, and staff. This information is dispersed among several locations and much can be accessed only in person. Most Anthropology collections are located at the Museum Support Center (MSC) in Suitland, Maryland, where key records are available in the Collections Records Room. However, some records are kept in other Smithsonian units, including facilities in downtown Washington, DC. This Guide is intended to show researchers what is available and how to access it, so that they can better plan their travel and make appropriate appointments in advance. Access to collections and collection records at MSC is by appointment only. Catalog Records The catalog is the primary source of information on individual objects in the collection. Information on early collections was originally recorded in catalog ledger books before being copied to catalog cards. They are the original catalog for early collections and may contain information not recorded elsewhere. Some of the early ledger books even contain small drawings of the artifacts. Collections staff can provide access to the original catalog ledgers and catalog cards in the Collections Records Room during scheduled research visits. The collections database contains information copied from the card catalog, as well as more recent additions. Not all information on the catalog cards has been copied into the database. However, all cataloged objects are represented in the database with at least a basic catalog record. A printout of any subset of catalog records is available by emailing our data manager. An online version of the database provides public access to the most commonly requested fields of information for 99% of active ethnology and archaeology records. It includes the scanned catalog cards for the ethnology collection, as well as about 111,000 digital images of the objects. More information and images are added as they become available. Catalog Card (click to enlarge) Ledger Book Detail 1 Detail 2 (different page) Accession Records Accession files, which document a group of material received from a single source at one time, are the primary source of information on how a collection was acquired. Each accession is identified by a unique number, which is distinct from the catalog numbers of the objects contained in the accession. Accession files may include information from donors or collectors that is not recorded in the catalog, such as the collector's original notes or correspondence discussing the history of the material. Brief accession histories based on these files, as well as biographical information on some donors and collectors, may be included in the main collections database, but are not available in the public online version. It is useful to check for other accessions from the same donor or collector, as each file may contain information about their locations and collecting practices. Accession files since 1990 are available in the Collections Records Room at MSC. Files for accessions dated 1958-1989 are maintained in the Registrar's Office of the National Museum of Natural History, located on the Washington Mall. They are accessible by appointment by calling the Registrar's Office at 202-633-1630. Accession files prior to 1958 are available on microfilm. Anthropology staff can provide access to the microfilm in the Collections Records Room during scheduled research visits at MSC. Another copy is available in the Registrar's Office. The microfilm duplicates the original accession files, which are located in the Smithsonian Institution Archives (SIA), as part of Record Unit 305, papers of the United States National Museum (which became the National Museum of Natural History.) The SIA is located in the Capital Gallery Building, near the Mall in downtown Washington. Advance appointments are recommended but not required. Contact osiaref@si.edu. Other Records The National Anthropological Archives (NAA) may contain manuscripts, photographs, or field notes associated with the object collections. Visit their home page and select "Guides to the Collection" for a variety of search options, including access to SIRIS, the online catalog for the Smithsonian library and archival collections. The NAA is located in the Museum Support Center, the same building as the object collections. Appointments to use the archives must be made separately from appointments to use the artifact collection. The Smithsonian Institution Archives maintains extensive collections relating to the history of the institution, including the papers of some donors and collectors represented in the Anthropology collections. In addition to Record Unit 305 (accession files), RU 192 (USNM Administrative Files, 1877- 1975) may be particularly useful. Visit their home page and select "Research and Resources" for a variety of reference tools. The SIA is located in the Capital Gallery Building, near the Mall in downtown Washington. Advance appointments are recommended but not required, though it is best to check in advance on the availability of records, since some are stored off-site. Contact osiaref@si.edu. Published Information Information on acquisitions was regularly reported in the Annual Reports of the U.S. National Museum, which began publication in 1884. For earlier collections, consult the Smithsonian Annual Reports. A number of other Smithsonian publication series are available in digital form through the Biodiversity Heritage Library. They include: Bulletins of the U.S. National Museum Bureau of Ethnology Bulletins No. 1 - 24 Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletins No. 25 - 200 Proceedings of the U.S. National Museum Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge Contributions to North American ethnology. Vol. I-VII, IX. [Ed. by J.W. Powell] The Smithsonian Contributions to Anthropology is a continuing series started in 1965, and highlights anthropological research at the Smithsonian, including research on the collections. Much American Indian material was collected by individuals associated with the Smithsonian's Bureau of American Ethnology. The BAE Annual Reports (available via Gallica) may include information on their work. The Smithsonian Institution Libraries, particularly the Anthropology branch library, may be of assistance in locating additional published materials. Advance appointments are recommended but not required for the Anthropology Library. Their phone number is 202-633-1640. Collector's tag on object Old label attached to object In the Collections Collecting information is sometimes written directly on objects, and original collector's tags may remain attached to objects. Tags that have been removed are preserved in the Collections Records Room, filed by accession number. The ethnology collection is organized in storage by region (Africa, Asia, Oceania etc.), culture area or country, and culture. Objects lacking a specific cultural designation may be stored in a general section for a wider region, or they may be placed near similar items to facilitate access. The storage location is a matter of convenience and should not be considered an alternative to consulting catalog data. The archaeology collection is organized geographically. Within the United States it is stored by state, county and site. ANTH 6201, GWU Prof. C. Greene 1 TOOL KIT #1 HOW TO FIND ‘EM: GOING BEYOND GOOGLE STARTING POINT Organize the information you have, with dates: NAME and TITLE ADDRESS OCCUPATION COLLECTING LOCALE Develop a search strategy. Google (or your favorite search engine) is a good starting point – but don’t stop there. Use available online resources as a tool to locate sources, many of which must be reviewed in person. Here are some further suggestions. US NATIONAL MUSEUM ANNUAL REPORTS Available through Biodiversity Heritage Library: http://biodiversitylibrary.org/bibliography/7964#/summary GENERAL BIOGRAPHICAL SOURCES Gelman Research Guides http://libguides.gwu.edu/browse.php See Biography Guide for sources and tips http://libguides.gwu.edu/bio Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online http://www.biographi.ca/index-e.html GENERAL GOVERNMENT SOURCES National Archives and Records Administration www.archives.gov/research/arc/index.html NARA non-electronic sources U.S. Census Data (by date and location) (available online by subscription services such as www.ancestry.com or free at http://archive.org/details/us_census) Applications for government employment Pension records Military employment records Dept of State records on diplomatic corps employees Dept of Indian Affairs records on employees Library of Congress (archives as well as published material) http://catalog.loc.gov/ ANTH 6201, GWU Prof. C. Greene 2 DIPLOMATS Principle Officers of the Department [of State] and U.S. Chiefs of Mission [1778-2005] https://history.state.gov/departmenthistory/people/principals-chiefs The Political Graveyard: A Database of Historic Cemeteries and much, much more regarding politicians, judges, and diplomats http://politicalgraveyard.com/ MILITARY SOURCES Great resources available onsite at the Naval Historical Center, Washington Navy Yard. National Archives Military Records: http://www.archives.gov/research/military/ Callahan, Edward W. List of officers of the Navy of the United States and of the Marine Corps, from 1775 to 1900, comprising a complete register of all present and former commissioned, warranted, and appointed officers of the United States Navy, and of the Marine Corps, regular and volunteer. Comp. from the official records of the Navy Department. New York, L.R. Hamersly & Co., 1901. [Available online at www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/NHC/Callahan/index.htm] Hamersley, Lewis Randolph The records of living officers of the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps. Comp. from official sources by Lewis Randolph Hamersley, 1847 -1910. New York, L. R. Hamersly & Co., various editions, 1870-1910. [Multiple editions available online 1884 edition: http://www.archive.org/details/recordsoflivingo01hame] Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships http://www.history.navy.mil/research/histories/ship-histories/danfs.html Heitman, Francis B. Historical register and dictionary of the United States Army, from its organization, September 29, 1789, to March 2, 1903. Washington, Govt. Print. Off., 1903. [various editions available – be sure to select the right period of time. Available online: http://www.archive.org/] Cullum, George Washington Biographical register of the officers and graduates of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y. Boston, Houghton, Mifflin, 1891; Cambridge [Mass.]: Printed at the Riverside Press, 1901-. [Several editions and supplements covering different periods of time. Volume 1, 3rd ed., and Supplement, Volume 4 are available at http://www.archive.org/. Others, including the 3rd edition, revised and extended, are available online through Google Books.] ANTH 6201, GWU Prof. C. Greene 3 MISSIONARY SOURCES Papers of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. Available on microfilm at the Library of Congress. Archives Guide to Papers of American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. Houghton Library, Harvard University http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01467 Sources for Research: Missions and World Christianity (Yale Univ. links to many sites) http://guides.library.yale.edu/missions_resources Selected other archives with material of interest (Wheaton College links to many sites) www.wheaton.edu/bgc/archives/nonwarch.html Mission Periodicals Database (British publications only) http://divdl.library.yale.edu/missionperiodicals/ Other likely sources: Reference librarians at universities with strong religious affiliation LOCAL SOURCES Newspapers ALADIN - See entry for News Sources under General Interest and Reference New York Times (1851-2006) Washington Post (1877-1993) Chicago Defender (1910-1975) Early American Newspapers (1690-1889) Library of Congress historical newspapers, 1836-1922 Searchable access to over 800 newspaper from around the country: http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov State historical societies: Look for archives and publications Look for newspaper resources Look for links to other public records Local historical societies, museums, libraries: Find them with the Museum Directory of the American Association of Museums. For Washington, DC, try the Washingtoniana Division at the M.L. King Public Library, http://dclibrary.org/node/35928. City Directories: Local guidebooks, in which anybody who was anybody provided information about themselves – their family, church, occupation, clubs. Some are online, others available only in libraries. PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS Medical – History of Medicine section, National Library of Medicine, NIH includes archives (with biographical material) and links to state archives www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/ ANTH 6201, GWU Prof. C. Greene 4 ALMA MATERS Many colleges and universities maintain files on alums, either in the Alumni Office or in the university archives. ANECDOTAL SOURCES Published memoirs by people who might have known the collector, either through their place of residence or encountering them at the collecting locale. These are often chatty, unprofessional, and provide incredibly rich context. They are hard to find through targeted scholarly searches; approach them through time and place. GENEOLOGICAL SOURCES Many great resources available online. Ask the reference librarian at your local public library for assistance. (Or don’t you have a great aunt or second cousin who’s into this?) Free: http://genforum.genealogy.com/ Useful for connecting with surnames and has a message board. Also has some locality sites: county or city. http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/ This site is available to the public but has associated fees for certain searches (such as social security birth/death info). It also is tied to Ancestry.com so can be accessed at a library. http://www.accessgenealogy.com/ (haven’t tried this one much) http://usgenweb.org/ Can get the researcher to many local/regional sites. As an example, for the Eastern Shore of Virginia, the Eastern Shore Public Library has a great site at: http://www.espl.org Another source for New York is: http://www.fultonhistory.com/. This site has scanned newspapers that can be searched easily – has ability to do Boolean searches, too. Cost: These can be accessed for free at your local public library: http://www.ancestry.com/ Has numerous useful records: census, military, birth, death, marriage, city directories, newspapers and family trees. Usually available at a library. http://www.newspaperarchive.com/ Has many online newspapers from various states. Allows a variety of searches to be made. ANTH 6201, GWU Prof. C. Greene 5 DESCENDANTS Obituaries of your donor/collector may identify descendants then living. You can search for people of the same name, if sufficiently distinctive, especially if living in the same city or region. Local property tax records may help to locate family, if the property stayed in the family. ANTHRO 6201, GWU Prof. C. Greene Spring 2016 1 TOOL KIT #2: FINDING LITERATURE ON MATERIAL CULTURE Even when you know how to use library resources pretty well, finding discussions of material culture can be particularly challenging. General thoughts: - Find a general ethnography about the culture and look over the bibliography section. - Once upon a time, ethnographies were expected to include material culture as a part of the description of a culture – look for older literature, esp. pre-1940. - Beginning in the 1970s, art history discovered non-Western material and called it art! Look for more recent literature in this domain. FINDING JOURNAL ARTICLES ANTHROPOLOGY PLUS (Aladin) This database indexes journal articles, as well as including monographs. It is a combination of the databases that index the holdings of two major anthropological libraries, Anthropological Index Online (British Museum) and Anthropological Literature (Peabody Museum, Harvard). ANTHROSOURCE (Aladin) This database includes full text articles from various journals, overlapping articles available through JSTOR. For several journals, such as the American Anthropologist and Museum Anthropology, it includes more recent materials than are available in JSTOR. ART ABSTRACTS (Aladin) Index and abstracts to art and art history journals since 1984, some linked to full-text articles. ART INDEX RETROSPECTIVE (Aladin) Index and abstracts to art and art history journals 1929 – 1984. SIRIS (publicly accessible Smithsonian database) For literature, search the Libraries section, not the Archives section. Journal articles are generally not indexed, the exception being articles and various ephemera in the library of the National Museum of African Art. GOOGLE SCHOLAR http://scholar.google.com/ Using the Scholar filter will tighten your Google search to journal articles – and patents, if you wish… FINDING BOOKS In spite of all the great databases and finding aids now available, shelf browsing is still one of the most productive strategies. Find the call number for a group of books relating to the culture of interest, go to the shelves, pull things off and browse tables of contents, bibliographies, and especially indexes. Gelman is not a good source for literature on material culture. Look in the SI Libraries online catalog to get started, then make an appointment to come in and browse. ANTHRO 6201, GWU Prof. C. Greene Spring 2016 2 An old strategy is to find one useful book, see what subject headings it is cataloged under, and search for other sources with the same subject heading. MUSEUM LITERATURE Museums are closely connected to material culture. Scholarly museum publication series are a prime source of information if you are willing to browse (many are not well indexed). Published collection catalogs are a rich source, as are exhibition catalogs. Word of caution: the former are often the result of careful restudy of a collection; the latter usually rely on extant catalog information. SMITHSONIAN CONTRIBUTIONS TO ANTHROPOLOGY http://www.sil.si.edu/smithsoniancontributions/ Full-text monographs published by the Smithsonian. World-wide in scope. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY ANNUAL REPORTS http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/bibliography/37968#/summary Full-text monographs from an era when material culture was often described. American coverage only, but includes archaeology as well as ethnology. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY BULLETINS http://www.sil.si.edu/DigitalCollections/BAE/Bulletin200/200title.htm Index to titles and authors of all BAE publications. AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS http://digitallibrary.amnh.org/dspace/ Full-text monographs from an era when material culture was often described. World-wide coverage in fields of archaeology, ethnology, and physical anthropology. BULLETIN OF THE PUBLIC MUSEUM OF THE CITY OF MILWAUKEE The full texts of volumes 1-3 (1911-1919) are available online through the HathiTrust Digital Library. Check the library for physical holdings and reprints. FIELDIANA A great publication series from the Field Museum of Natural History, with many issues devoted to description of collections, including cultural context. Many issues are available online through the Biodiversity Heritage Library. RES: JOURNAL OF ANTHROPOLOGY AND AESTHETICS Joint publication of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology and the Harvard Art Museum. Browse titles at: https://www.peabody.harvard.edu/res-journal ANTHRO 6201, GWU Prof. C. Greene Spring 2016 3 OTHER USEFUL SOURCES (Google will find many but not all of these resources) ONLINE BOOKS http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/ One of my favorites! A database of books available in full-text online, with links to the sites where they are available. A great resource for access to old literature that is often now available only in rare book and other non-circulating library resources. And once you are directed to the site hosting the on-line edition, you can often run full text searches. INTERNET ARCHIVE http://archive.org A great resource for text searchable online books – plus the definitive guide to The Grateful Dead. HATHI TRUST DIGITAL LIBRARY http://hathitrust.org A consortium of university libraries, so the literature is good for research purposes. GWU is not a partner so you cannot download books, but you can search and read online. GOOGLE BOOKS http://books.google.com The book section is huge and can be overwhelming with gems hidden among lots of non- scholarly sources. Shape your search carefully. CONSERVATION INFORMATION NETWORK http://www.bcin.ca/ This is a database of citations and abstracts to articles about the conservation of museum specimens. You can search under materials and geographic regions. Many articles provide basic background information about the objects undergoing treatment. UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON GUIDE TO ANTHROPOLOGICAL MATERIAL http://www.ucl.ac.uk/library/subject-support/guides/anthropology A British orientation that sometimes leads to sources not included in American services. BIODIVERSITY HERITAGE LIBRARY http://biodiversitylibrary.org Don’t be fooled by the title. Includes some anthropological literature as well, esp. museum-related. ANTHRO 6201, GWU Prof. C. Greene Spring 2016 1 TOOL KIT #3: ONLINE ARTIFACT DATABASES ONLINE DATABASES WITH IMAGES OF ANTHROPOLOGICAL OBJECTS American Museum of Natural History http://anthro.amnh.org/ Autry National Center (Native American material) http://collections.theautry.org Bishop Museum (Honolulu; primarily Pacific material) http://www.bishopmuseum.org/collections-3/archaeology/ http://www.bishopmuseum.org/collections-3/ethnology/ British Museum http://www.britishmuseum.org/collection Burke Museum, University of Washington http://www.burkemuseum.org/research-and-collections/collections-databases California Academy of Science http://researcharchive.calacademy.org/research/anthropology/collections/index.asp Canadian Museum of History http://collections.civilization.ca/ Field Museum of Natural History (good coverage of Pacific material) http://fieldmuseum.org/explore/department/anthropology/collections Metropolitan Museum of Art http://www.metmuseum.org/collections Musée de Quai Branly (Great world coverage – my new favorite site!) http://collections.quaibranly.fr/ Museum of Anthropology, University of British Columbia http://collection-online.moa.ubc.ca/ Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (Some non-Western materials included) http://www.mfa.org/collections National Museum of Ethnology, Leiden (Netherlands) http://collectie.wereldculturen.nl/default.aspx?lang=en ANTHRO 6201, GWU Prof. C. Greene Spring 2016 2 Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology (World coverage, including photographs) http://pmem.unix.fas.harvard.edu:8080/peabody/ Phoebe Apperson Hearst Museum, Berkeley http://hearstmuseum.berkeley.edu/collections/overview Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford http://www.prm.ox.ac.uk/collections.html Smithsonian Institution, Collections Search Center (pay attention to “catalog record source”) http://collections.si.edu V&A (formerly known as Victoria and Albert Museum – how stuffy!) http://images.vam.ac.uk/indexplus/page/Home.html Yale Peabody Museum http://peabody.yale.edu/collections/search-collections?ant