Author Archive for kathryn

Museum Journal - Become an Associate Editor

As part of the process of publishing The International Journal of the Inclusive Museum all submissions are sent for peer refereeing, prior to publication. Assessment, comments and guidance by the referees are an essential part of the publication process and invaluable to the authors of the submitted papers.

In recognition of the important role of referees, the international advisory board acknowledges all referees who have refereed papers as an ‘Associate Editor’ in the volume of the journal they have contributed to.

If you would like to referee papers submitted to The International Journal of the Inclusive Museum, please email journals@onmuseums.com, with your professional details, areas of expertise and contact details. If we feel you are qualified and we require refereeing for papers within your expertise, we will contact you.

Series: On Museums

We are accepting book proposals for the imprint On Museums.

Common Ground is setting new standards of rigorous academic knowledge creation and scholarly publication.

Unlike other publishers, we’re not interested in the size of potential markets or competition from other books. We’re only interested in the intellectual quality of the work.

If your book is a brilliant contribution to a specialist area of knowledge that only serves a small intellectual community, we still want to publish it. If it is expansive and has a broad appeal, we want to publish it too, but only if it is of the highest intellectual quality.

Museum Journal Award Finalists

Congratulations to all of the Award finalists:

Museum Journal Award Winner

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Congratulations to Ingrid Templer the winner of the International Award for Excellence in the inclusive museum field with the paper New Media Interactivity in the Museum: Democratisation or Dumbing Down?

Paper abstract: New media discourse brings to the table discussions about interactivity, about how humans interact with media and technology in terms of engagement and meaning making. New media, is the result of old media becoming computerised, that is, produced, stored and distributed in a numerical form. It includes media such as the web, computer games and DVDs. Virtual reality environments also employ new media.

This paper questions whether new media interactivity fundamentally differs from interactivity in general. More specifically it explores whether new media enhances the museum experience or trivialises it. Does it democratise knowledge, or is it a form of ‘dumbing down’ in order to appeal to the greatest possible number of people?

Two museums are analysed, both in the Johannesburg area, namely, the Origins Centre and the Maropeng Visitors Centre. Both have themes of mankind’s origin and early development in Africa. Their approach to interactivity however, differs considerably, thereby providing fertile contexts for comparison.

If you have read this paper and would like to make comments please add a review.

Museum Journal: Recently Published

im-journal-coverThe most recent issue, Volume 2, Number 4, of The International Journal of the Inclusive Museum includes:

Museums Journal, Volume 2 now complete

The final issue of Volume 2 of The International Journal of the Inclusive Museum has now been published.

Volume 2, Number 4 includes:

Museums Journal: Recently Published

im-journal-coverThe most recent issue, Volume 2, Number 3, of The International Journal of the Inclusive Museum includes:

Museums Journal, Volume 2, Number 3 now available

The third issue of Volume 2 of The International Journal of the Inclusive Museum has now been published.

Volume 2, Number 3 includes:

Museum Journal Associate Editors

The Associate Editors listing for Volume 2 of  The International Journal of the Inclusive Museum is now available.

Museums Journal, Volume 2, Number 2 now available

The second issue of Volume 2 of The International Journal of the Inclusive Museum has now been published.

Volume 2, Number 2 contains:

Continue reading ‘Museums Journal, Volume 2, Number 2 now available’

Museums Journal, Volume 2, Number 1 now available

The first issue of Volume 2 of The International Journal of the Inclusive Museum has now been published.

Volume 2, Number 1 contains:

Continue reading ‘Museums Journal, Volume 2, Number 1 now available’

Inclusive Museum Journal listed in Ulrichs

The International Journal of the Inclusive Museum has been accepted for inclusion in Ulrich’s Periodicals Directory.

Ulrichs is an authoritative knowledgebase of information about more than 300,000 serials of all types from around the world—academic and scholarly journals, peer-reviewed titles, online publications, newspapers and other resources. Bibliographic records provide details such as ISSN and title, publisher, online availability, language, subject area, abstracting & indexing coverage, searchable tables of contents, and full-text reviews.

On Museums Imprint Launched

Common Ground Publishing has launched a new imprint, On Museums.

You can now submit proposals or completed manuscript submissions of:

Books should be between 30,000 words to 150,000 words in length. They will be published simultaneously in print and electronic formats.

Museum Journal Award Winner

Congratulations to Janice Baker the winner of the International Award for Excellence in the inclusive museum field with the paper Beyond the Rational Museum: Toward a Discourse of Inclusion.

Paper abstract: Museum discourse is not inclusive in that it neglects or negates the affective potential of museums. Affect is precognitive sensation, it is unexpected, and leaves a more lasting impression than re-cognition. The museum’s role in the shaping of histories, and its origins in class and gender exploitation are important areas of discourse, however, the focus on these issues also limits discourse. Ideologically driven critique seems unable to explain the experiential affect of exhibits of art and material culture. Arguably, an alternative museum with a contradictory set of meanings has always existed alongside the rational museum of critical discourse. Some critics do acknowledge that their disciplines seem unable to grapple with this ‘alternative museum’, however, there is not a critical vocabulary of affect with which to give it appropriate expression. Gilles Deleuze’s philosophical ideas give relevance to affect, and are useful in shaping or ‘shocking’ a way toward a more inclusive critical discourse, which might lead toward more inclusive museum practices.

If you have read this paper and would like to make comments please add a review.

Paper Submissions Open for Volume 2 of the Journal

Paper submissions are now open for Volume 2 of The International Journal of the Inclusive Museum.

You will first need to submit a presentation proposal for the conference as either an attending or virtual participant. If accepted you will be able to submit your full paper for refereeing and possible publication in the Journal.

Please check the submission guidelines prior to submitting your paper.