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  • Estonian National Museum  (3)
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  • Estonian National Museum  (3)
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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Estonian National Museum ; 2018
    In:  Eesti Rahva Muuseumi aastaraamat , No. 61 ( 2018-10-11), p. 14-43
    In: Eesti Rahva Muuseumi aastaraamat, Estonian National Museum, , No. 61 ( 2018-10-11), p. 14-43
    Abstract: The Echo of the Urals exhibition at the Estonian National Museum Our objective was to analyse the process of preparing the Echo of the Urals permanent exhibition we produced for the Estonian National Museum. We focused on the historical background of the exhibition and the methodological and ideological positions that the exhibition committee relied on. In this article, we dealt with how the concept for the exhibition developed and the principles for the technical solutions used at the exhibition. We also tried to analyse the retrospective views taken by the exhibition’s content and design committees regarding their work. Many previous Finno-Ugric permanent exhibitions at the Estonian National Museum had focused on presenting folk art, and this aspiration was reflected even in the titles of the exhibitions. Moreover, the Finno-Ugric scholars at the National Museum also tried to use the exhibitions to gain an overview of the existing materials at the museum concerning a specific ethnic group. Such exhibitions also focused on the Finno-Ugric people and so as representative a set of artefacts as possible was placed on display, systematised in the spirit of scientific objectivity. From the second half of the 1990s on, the museum’s researchers started producing exhibitions on more experimental themes as well, testing the suitability of various ideas for an ethnographic exhibit. Some ideas are exciting on paper while artefacts can fail to express more abstract qualities. Our permanent exhibition was based on the historical legacy, and we tried to find a simple, relevant starting idea for the exhibition that made full use of the museum’s collections. After discussions, we chose Echo of the Urals as the title of the exhibition. In doing so, we tried to refer in a lyrical vein to the idea of an original home for the Finno-Ugrians and allow different peoples to be introduced in a single framework. The idea of linguistic kinship may be easy to understand for scholars and many Finno-Ugrians, but we also thought about visitors who did not know anything about the topic. We devoted the main part of the exhibit to the ethnographic representation of gender roles, trying to get viewers to think about everyday gender roles and cultural differences. We hoped that presenting the cultural roles of males and females would be a simple starting idea that would also be of interest to many. The exhibition design had to be state-of-the-art, a finely tuned machine, at the same time creating emotionally gripping, seemingly semi-natural ethnographic attractions. As a result of our research, we found that although we tried to create an emotionally captivating and conceptually balanced exhibition, we were criticised in the critical reception for allegedly haphazard choices (the gender theme was criticised) and having a romantic aim to find beauty (to the detriment of reflecting the situation faced by indigenous cultures today). Our analysis of the making of our ethnographic exhibition with ambitious and seemingly conflicting or even simultaneously unattainable goals is limited by the lack of a bystander’s perspective and the lack of temporal distance between the completion of the exhibition and the our meta-research. Our main conclusion regarding the process of creating the exhibition consists of thorough conceptualisation intertwined with intuitive aesthetic and intellectual prediction.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 2585-450X , 1406-0388
    URL: Issue
    Language: Estonian
    Publisher: Estonian National Museum
    Publication Date: 2018
    SSG: 7,53
    SSG: 7,44
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Estonian National Museum ; 2021
    In:  Eesti Rahva Muuseumi aastaraamat Vol. 63, No. 1 ( 2021-12-21), p. 15-43
    In: Eesti Rahva Muuseumi aastaraamat, Estonian National Museum, Vol. 63, No. 1 ( 2021-12-21), p. 15-43
    Abstract: Our aim is to examine how the principles of museum collecting are reflected in ethnographic fieldwork diaries. In recent decades, scholars and representatives of indigenous peoples have sharply criticized earlier modes of ethnographic collection and representation. The earlier acquisition policy was based on the understanding that ethnographers had a kind of prerogative to collect objects and that people had to relinquish their possessions in the name of science. By now such collecting practices have changed, but the analysis of the ethnographers’ earlier techniques enables us to gain a clearer sense of the historical context of museum collection. In this article, we study various metaphors related to museum collecting that we found in Soviet-era Finno-Ugric expedition diaries kept in the manuscript archive of the Estonian National Museum (ENM). We examine how the museum’s ethnographers used specific metaphorical expressions and descriptive models. An exploration of diaries through metaphors offers a way to discuss the formation of ethnographic knowledge. Such an approach can be more subjective, but the metaphorical models that reappear in the field diaries do show that certain beliefs and the fundamental nature of their expression were more prevalent among the museum’s staff. We analyze the diaries of Finno-Ugric fieldwork kept from 1975 to 1989, the most intensive period of the museum’s collecting work among the Finno-Ugric peoples. The objects collected during these years make up almost two thirds of the current Finno-Ugric collection of the ENM. The Finno-Ugric expedition diaries of the mature Soviet era reveal some metaphorical expressions and descriptions pertaining to museum collecting that are used repeatedly. We found that the metaphors of trade, war and loot characterized the era’s collection practices in the most expressive way. These metaphors reflect, in the humorous and grotesque key, the ENM’s staff’s perceptions of time-specific museological principles. In their 1980 monograph “Metaphors We Live By”, George Lakoff and Mark Johnson substantiated the universal potential of metaphor in human thought. While for Lakoff and Johnson, metaphor is a tool that enables us to talk about reality, what is more important is that metaphors serve as a meeting place of fundamental questions concerning people’s everyday experience and life. The analysis of the ENM fieldwork diaries partially confirms Lakoff and Johnson’s view. Although ethnographers use metaphors of trade, war and loot in their fieldwork diaries, they need not always be related to existential reflections, but are often just an entertaining play on words. At the same time, the playful use of metaphors does not in itself preclude the fact that they also reflect the discourses of the deep structure of ethnographic consciousness.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 2585-450X , 1406-0388
    URL: Issue
    URL: Issue
    Language: Estonian
    Publisher: Estonian National Museum
    Publication Date: 2021
    SSG: 7,53
    SSG: 7,44
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Estonian National Museum ; 2021
    In:  Eesti Rahva Muuseumi aastaraamat Vol. 63, No. 2 ( 2021-10-1), p. 231-253
    In: Eesti Rahva Muuseumi aastaraamat, Estonian National Museum, Vol. 63, No. 2 ( 2021-10-1), p. 231-253
    Abstract: Our aim is to analyse changes in livelihoods that took place among the Komi people during the 1990s. We concentrate primarily on hunting but touch upon fishing, agriculture, cattle breeding, and timber rafting as well. We employ primarily an autoethnographic perspective, presenting our study through Vladimir Lipin’s own reflections as well as stories told by his friends and their relatives. Furthermore, we contextualise Vladimir Lipin’s life experience by historical ethnographic studies to reveal similarities and differences in comparison with the situation at the end of the 19th – beginning of the 20th centuries, as presented by earlier ethnographers. As a result of our analysis, we discovered that developments in Komi Republic, and primarily in Kulömdin District from where Vladimir Lipin is from, can be divided into three directions. Firstly, many old subsistence practices and subsequent attitudes were preserved. The second tendency was that economic and moral degradation in the society reach the grass-root level and the last trend was connected to initiating new techniques of subsistence (including re-introduction of some traditional practices). We conclude that collapse of the Soviet economic system had a rather severe impact on people’s lives and some negative tendencies are irreversible. However, most of the Komi people reacted to changes that took place during the transition period in economic environment of Komi countryside with diverse and creative means.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 1406-0388
    URL: Issue
    Language: Unknown
    Publisher: Estonian National Museum
    Publication Date: 2021
    SSG: 7,53
    SSG: 7,44
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
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