Posts tagged literature

Routledge Museum Studies Publication Catalogue online

Looks like there will be some interesting new museum books this year! I’m especially excited about “Museums Equality and Social Justice” and “Post Critical Museology”.

Anyone know of any other good reading lists like this online? I could always add a tab on the home page like the free resources one, along the lines of “required reading”. 

What would you say?

Museum World Book Collection: Chapters

I know, I know. I am still not posting as much as I would like to, but I’m still rushed off my feet! Sorry!

But, readers and subscribers, I saw this and thought of you:

We’re currently updating this list with all the chapters and authors that appear in the Museum World Book Collection. There are lots so it may take a little time!

You can also gain exclusive free access to one chapter from each book in the series - so you can try before you buy.

From the Tenement Museum (NY) blog:

What does an American girl named Peggy who eats apples have in common  with the Nigerian author Chimamanda Adichie? Very little, as it turns  out. On June 17th, Tenement Talks presented The Thing Around Your  Neck with the award-winning writer in conversation with Tayari  Jones. After the author read from her new compilation of short stories,  Jones asked Adichie to recap on a TED Talk that she gave in July of 2009  about the dangers of the single story. According to Jones, the TED Talk  received over 40,000 hits — an impressive number of listeners.  Adichie  said that when she was younger, she used to read children’s literature  from England and the USA. As a child, she thought all stories had white  people in them because the majority of main characters in the books she  read were white. When she began writing, she wrote the kind of stories  she read. Many of her characters had names like Peggy, were “white as  snow, and ate apples.” Adichie said she had not tasted an apple until  she was 13, and she had never seen snow. She finally found other books  that reflected experiences similar to her own. Adichie commented that in  many cases, middle-class children all over the developing world are  exposed to literature that does not mirror their own lives. She  commented on the importance of children being able to see themselves in  the literature they read because it shows that their story is worthy  enough to be written. Providing different perspectives in literature  allows readers who are often underrepresented to have a voice and a  story they can connect to personally.Adichie also mentioned that  listening to diverse points of view is imperative in understanding  current events. She told an anecdote about a recent trip she took to  Mexico. She had heard a great deal about Mexicans immigrating illegally  to America on the news, but when she visited Mexico, she was surprised  that the people were not like “the abject immigrants” she had heard  about. Taking into consideration the multiple truths that exist in any  scenario have helped deepen and elevate her writing. Link to the  TED Talk: http://www.ted.com/talks/chimamanda_adichie_the_danger_of_a_single_story.html-  Posted by Alana

From the Tenement Museum (NY) blog:

What does an American girl named Peggy who eats apples have in common with the Nigerian author Chimamanda Adichie? Very little, as it turns out. On June 17th, Tenement Talks presented The Thing Around Your Neck with the award-winning writer in conversation with Tayari Jones. After the author read from her new compilation of short stories, Jones asked Adichie to recap on a TED Talk that she gave in July of 2009 about the dangers of the single story. According to Jones, the TED Talk received over 40,000 hits — an impressive number of listeners.

Adichie said that when she was younger, she used to read children’s literature from England and the USA. As a child, she thought all stories had white people in them because the majority of main characters in the books she read were white. When she began writing, she wrote the kind of stories she read. Many of her characters had names like Peggy, were “white as snow, and ate apples.” Adichie said she had not tasted an apple until she was 13, and she had never seen snow. She finally found other books that reflected experiences similar to her own. Adichie commented that in many cases, middle-class children all over the developing world are exposed to literature that does not mirror their own lives. She commented on the importance of children being able to see themselves in the literature they read because it shows that their story is worthy enough to be written. Providing different perspectives in literature allows readers who are often underrepresented to have a voice and a story they can connect to personally.

Adichie also mentioned that listening to diverse points of view is imperative in understanding current events. She told an anecdote about a recent trip she took to Mexico. She had heard a great deal about Mexicans immigrating illegally to America on the news, but when she visited Mexico, she was surprised that the people were not like “the abject immigrants” she had heard about. Taking into consideration the multiple truths that exist in any scenario have helped deepen and elevate her writing.

Link to the TED Talk:
http://www.ted.com/talks/chimamanda_adichie_the_danger_of_a_single_story.html

- Posted by Alana