B8925 - Colonialism, Archeology and Museums (1) (LM)

Anno Accademico 2025/2026

  • Docente: Davide Domenici
  • Crediti formativi: 6
  • SSD: M-DEA/01
  • Lingua di insegnamento: Inglese

Conoscenze e abilità da conseguire

During the course students will acquire an understanding of the historical and epistemological relationships linking the development of archaeology and museology with colonialism. Current debates on decolonization will be reviewed, with special attention to contemporary movements in countries with a colonial past and to debates involving topics such as repatriation of human remains and artefacts, local curators, and community archaeology. By the end of the course students will be able to set the history of archaeology and museums in a wider epistemological framework, critically analysing archaeological and museological theory and practice. Students will also be able to apply their analytical skills to professional activities linked with the popularization and public use of archaeological and museum-linked expertise.

Contenuti

The course will consider, in roughly chronological order, the development of Western archaeological/anthropological inquiry and museum collections within the broader historical and epistemological context of European colonial expansion. Beginning with the emergence of antiquarian practices in the sixteenth century, the course will explore the many ways in which scientific inquiry became entangled with the operativity of colonialism. Special attention will be paid to the study of non-European peoples and pasts, with a particular focus on Indigenous American ones. Selected case studies will be examined to shed light on the ways in which this entanglement developed over the centuries, emphasizing not only how archaeological research and collecting practices benefited from European political domination of non-Western countries, but also how academic disciplines were instrumental in providing the epistemological frameworks that legitimized colonial domination, thus creating a circular, self-perpetuating relationship of mutual support. The last part of the course will discuss recent attempts to decolonize archaeological and museum activities through the implementation of best practices such as collaborative and community archaeology, object repatriation, and indigenous curatorship.

The lessons will be divided into the following five thematic sections
WEEK 1. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND 1: FROM THE 16TH TO THE 19TH CENTURY
WEEK 2. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND 2: 20TH CENTURY
WEEK 3. CRITICAL MUSEOLOGY AND THE REPATRIATION DEBATE
WEEK 4. CRITICAL HERITAGE AND COLLABORATIVE PRACTICES
WEEK 5. EXPLORING COLLECTIONS: PROVENANCE RESEARCH AND BIOGRAPHIES OF OBJECTS

Please note that classes will begin on Monday 15 September 2025

Testi/Bibliografia

Students attending classes will be asked to read the articles and book chapters of a syllabus that will be collectively discussed in class once a week. All the articles and book chapters of the syllabus will be provided at the beginning of the course in the ‘teaching materials’ sections of the website, only accessible to Unibo students with institutional credentials.

At the end of the course, attending students will write a final paper on a topic previously agreed with the teacher, employing both the syllabus of weekly readings as well as a more specific set of bibliographical references that each student is required to create. 

Non-attending students will be evaluated through an oral exam. To prepare the exam they will be required to read the articles and book chapters of the syllabus, PLUS one of the following volumes:

Ames, Michael M., Cannibal Tours and Glass Boxes. The Anthropology of Museums, University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver 1992.

Bennett, Tony, Museums, Power, Knowledge. Selected Essays, Routledge, London 2018

Clifford, James, Routes: Travel and Translation in the Late Twentieth Century, Harvard University Press, Cambridge 1997.

Díaz-Andreu, Margarita, A World History of Nineteenth-Century Archaeology. Nationalism, Colonialism, and the Past, Oxford University Press, Oxford 2007

Gosden, Chris and Ruth B. Phillips (eds.), Sensible Objects. Colonialism, Museums and Material Culture, Berg, Oxford-New York 2006.

Henare, Amiria, Museums, Anthropology and Imperial Exchange, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2005.

Karp, Ivan, and Steven D. Levine, Exhibiting Cultures. The Poetics and Politics of Museum Display, Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington and London 1991.

Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, Barbara, Destination Culture. Tourism, Museums, and Heritage, University of California Press, Berkeley 1998.

Lydon, Jane and Uzma Rizvi (eds.): Handbook of Postcolonial Archaeology, Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek 2010 (Introduction and four selected chapters).

Rizvi, Uzma Z., Archaeology and the postcolonial critique, Altamira Press, Plymouth 2008 (Introduction and four selected chapters).

Sleeper-Smith, Susan (ed.), Knowledge. Museums and Indigenous Perspectives, University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln 2009.

Thomas, David, Skull Wars: Kennewick Man, Archaeology, and the Battle for Native American Identity, Basic Books, New York 2000.

Thomas, Nicholas, Colonialism’s Culture. Anthropology, Travel and Government, Polity Press, Cambridge 1994.

Thomas, Nicholas, Entangled Objects. Exchange, Material Culture, and Colonialism in the Pacific, Harvard University Press 1991.

Metodi didattici

Teaching method will be based on both frontal lessons and collective discussions.

During frontal lessons the teacher will introduce general topics and connected scholary debates, then discussing in detail some specific example based on textual or visual sources in order to introduce the students to actual source-reading activity. Students will be encouraged to comment and ask questions.

Every week a certain amount of time (approx. 2 hours) will be specifically devoted to collective discussion of the readings and of the themes exposed during the frontal lessons. Students will be strongly encouraged to actively take part in the discussion.

Modalità di verifica e valutazione dell'apprendimento

Active participation in class discussions will be one of the elements taken into account for the final evaluation. Students attending classwork will write a final paper on a topic agreed with the teacher and based both on the references listed in the reading list and on further specific bibliography selected by the student.

The grade assigned to the paper will be based on:

- selection of the topic and its relatedness with the course content

- ability to identify relevant bibliography

- critical analysis

- clarity in structure and aims

- language proficiency

Students that do not attend classwork will have to pass an oral exam, with questions aimed to verify the student's knowledge of the themes treated in the program's texts. The questions will be aimed at testing the student's ability in exposing with an appropriate language some of the topics tackled by the books, as well as his/her skills in making connections between different texts in order to build an argument.

Proper language and the ability to critically speak about the books' content will lead to a good/excellent final grade

Acceptable language and the ability to resume the books' content will lead to a sufficient/fair grade.

Insufficient linguistic proficiency and fragmentary knowledge of the books' content will lead to a failure in passing the exam.

Exam sessions (only for oral exams) are scheduled monthly throughout the year, except in August. Students can only take the exam once they have finished their lessons.

Strumenti a supporto della didattica

During frontal lessons the teacher will do ample use of power point presentations containing maps, as well as a good deal of textual and visual sources commented upon during the lesson.

After class, the powerpoint files will be uploaded in the teaching material section of the website, so that students will be able to download them.

Students with learning disorders and\or temporary or permanent disabilities: please, contact the office responsible (https://site.unibo.it/studenti-con-disabilita-e-dsa/en/for-students ) as soon as possible so that they can propose acceptable adjustments. The request for adaptation must be submitted in advance (15 days before the exam date) to the lecturer, who will assess the appropriateness of the adjustments, taking into account the teaching objectives.

Orario di ricevimento

Consulta il sito web di Davide Domenici