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History General

The Making and Unmaking of a University Museum

The McCord, 1921-1996

by (author) Brian J. Young

Publisher
McGill-Queen's University Press
Initial publish date
May 2000
Category
General, Civilization, General
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780773520493
    Publish Date
    May 2000
    List Price
    $110.00

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Description

Museums and cultural institutions across North America and Europe are being transformed by budget cuts, re-evaluation of their cultural missions, evolving concepts of museology, and changing audiences, making Brian Young's trenchant history of a prestigious university museum, Montreal's McCord Museum of Canadian History, especially pertinent. In The Making and Unmaking of a University Museum Young elucidates the relationship between museums and communities by examining the nineteenth-century social context of the family who bequeathed their collection to McGill University and the collection's fate in an academic institution. Tracing the museum's history from its founding by David Ross McCord, he emphasizes the centrality of elite women to the culture of the museum and its survival in the twentieth century, the museum's importance as the collective memory of Montreal's English-speaking elite, and the difficulty academic historians have had in dealing with material history. He recounts a sorry tale of mismatched institutional and intellectual cultures that culminated in the university's transfer of custodial responsibility to a corporate museum board and the collapse of the museum's central research and conservation mandates. The Making and Unmaking of a University Museum reveals the complex and often conflicting relationships between private collectors, curators, museum and university officials, volunteers, researchers, philanthropic foundations, the state, and the public. It shows how the makeup, interests, and perspectives of these groups have changed over the course of the century, leading to the current crisis in which many museums are forced to function according to a corporate culture in which the dictates of audience size, marketing, and public relations experts dominate the priorities of curators and collections, the needs of scholars and students, and the interests of communities. Young exposes the present-day conflict between cultural institutions operating ahistorically and often without any social vision and a public demanding greater help in understanding the past. It will be of interest to everyone who cares about culture, museums, and public memory.

About the author

McGill University

Brian J. Young's profile page

Editorial Reviews

"Young provides some unique insights into the gendered issues surrounding the academic perception of museums in this country and how history has been practiced in some of the major Canadian universities. The Making and Unmaking of a University Museum is also a window onto the Anglo community in Montreal at a time of profound change." Adrienne Hood, Department of History, Victoria College, University of Toronto