Nature’s Memory

R665.00

Zoologist Jack Ashby spends his life working in Britain’s natural history museums, and in Nature’s Memory he guides us through a series of extraordinary collections, from marvellous mounted whale skeletons and impossibly tiny insect cabinets to buried treasures in vast museum storehouses.

In stock

SKU: 9780241656884 Category:

Nature's Memory

But look more closely at these displays: all is not as it seems. While most exhibits succeed in communicating feelings of wonder and awe – a vital function when less people than ever before have access to the outdoors – Ashby argues that the version of nature natural history museums present does not always reflect reality, with specimens revealing more about the biases of curators than they do about the species they represent. Likewise, the ways in which museums have traditionally told the story of their own histories has disproportionately elevated the contributions of certain kinds of people whilst diminishing the work of others, often ignoring their complex colonial heritage altogether.

But Ashby contends that these issues are precisely why it’s such an exciting time to be a natural historian, for while society shapes museums, so too can museums shape society – for the good. And as we face the existential threat of cataclysmic biodiversity loss, natural history museums will emerge as indispensable resources in the fight against climate catastrophe.

Product Details

Hardcover
ISBN: 9780241656884
Pages: 336
Dimensions: 16.3 x 3 x 24.2 cm

You might be interested in