The Narrative Dilemma

In my last blog post, I talked about the beauty of simplicity in storytelling – being selective in what you say so that it comes through clearly and compellingly. This approach has its critics though, who argue that we are defined as much by what we don’t say as by what we do.

Postmodern critiques of museums have pointed out the shared history that museums have with the colonialism and imperialism of (particularly) the 18th and 19th centuries. Museums were repositories of colonial bounty, sometimes sourced via practices that would be considered highly unethical by today’s standards. Objects were classified and ordered according to systems that  mirrored the prevailing natural, social and cultural hierarchy. ‘Naturally’, the  white western European gentleman occupied the top tier as the pinnacle of civilisation and scholarly knowledge.

Knowingly or otherwise, museum curators reinforced this sociocultural worldview. Museums placed ‘primitive’ Indigenous cultural artefacts alongside Natural History collections – thus positioning them as part of ‘nature’ and not ‘culture’ (and definitely not civilisation!). There was no space for other interpretations of the objects and their meanings besides that of Western scholarship – in the parlance of Postmodernism any alternative interpretations or voices were ‘silenced’.

19th century museum interior (Source http://www.flickr.com/photos/museemccordmuseum/2865472738/)

Museums of the time may have ostensibly had public education as part of their mission, but there was little concession made for the prior knowledge or interest of the visitor. The visitor had no choice but to engage with the displays on the curator’s terms, and if the minimal interpretation provided was insufficient for understanding it was a deficiency in the visitor not the curator. Commentators of the time lamented that increased public access was bringing the ‘wrong sort’ of visitor to the museum, who failed to appreciate the collections in a way that they deemed appropriate.

Constructivism emerged in the second half of the 20th century as part of a backlash against this ‘master narrative’ worldview, as the social and political role of the museum changed. This was done in a broader academic context where implicit power relationships in society were being deconstructed and questioned.

Consequently, the desire to allow for multiple interpretations has made the idea of a strong narrative or storyline an anathema for some. A storyline is considered an imposition, potentially ‘silencing’ other perspectives or interpretations that the visitor may make if allowed to engage with the objects more freely.

However, this brings us to a conundrum – exhibitions developed along postmodern or constructivist principles can be just as baffling to visitors as the minimally-interpreted elitist institutions of times past.

The freedom to have multiple points of entry and thus interpretation can just as easily manifest itself as a space which is confusing and disorientating. Juxtapositions of objects with no overlying message or storyline can be interpreted by visitors unversed in the constructivist viewpoint as being  ‘a mess’ or ‘all over the place’. Rather than liberated from an imposed institutional storyline, visitors can end up feeling confused and demoralised. A lack of storyline may even be interpreted as a lack of intellectual courage on the part of curators – an accusation levelled at museums by Amanda Lohrey and the subject of my first blog post nearly a year ago.

Postmodernists may argue that visitors need to be ‘educated’ into new interpretations and to be present with their discomfort at the lack of narrative, in order to give new meanings and interpretations space. But this point of view seems to be just another version of ‘the visitor is at fault’ arrogance of the Victorian-era curators.

I am not opposed to multiple interpretations and leaving things open to visitors making their own meanings. But sometimes (and apologies if this is  a bit ironic), the fact that this is the intent needs to be made clear somehow. Otherwise, if taken to extremes, the constructivist approach may well end up substituting one type of elitism for another.

2 Replies to “The Narrative Dilemma”

  1. Hi Regan,

    Its funny how often I see parallels between your world and that of the contentious beast referred to as ‘online learning’.

    In this instance I see a very similar schism when people are trying to learn what a ‘good online course’ looks like. There is a progressive tension between wanting to see a ‘here’s one we made earlier’ (i.e. mirroring the constructivist, narrative model you’ve talked about) and wanting to see the abstract components and being left to construct meaning in the context of the individual (in your minimalist elitist model above).

    The only solution I’ve found is to try and cover as many bases as possible, which coincidentally aligns with some of the concepts I’m thinking about in http://athabascau.academia.edu/StellaLee/Papers/580807/Design_of_an_adaptive_learner_directed_model_for_e-learning (courtesy of @stellal) at the moment as I prepare for a presentation around this topic next month. Of course the broader you cast the net, the more effort is involved – whether it be museums or online education.

    One thing I am keen on promoting is the telling of the same story from multiple perspectives – which can promote critical thought while still supporting a storytelling model.

    Thanks for the post,

    Mark.

    1. Hi Mark,

      Thanks for link – I’d forgotten all about the Kolb and McCarthy learning styles model but I’m pretty sure I’ve still got some paperwork on it (somewhere …)

      Reading your comment, I’d be interested in knowing whether the people who favour the ‘mirroring’ approach are from a more science-based tradition and if the more abstract ones are more of a humanities bent. Learning styles notwithstanding (and who’s to say which is cause and which is effect?), it appears to me that science teaching / learning is done more commonly in a Modelling framework – sample problems, defined problem-solving methods (“here’s one we did earlier”). On the other hand, humanities teaching / learning is something I’ll call (for the sake of argument) an Interpretive style. You don’t learn subjects like History by following sample problems – you have to look at the primary resources, discuss and debate in a framework where right and wrong are far more nuanced than they are in the sciences.

      Both of us work in areas which bring together people from different disciplines, each having different implicit assumptions about how teaching and learning works. So perhaps we have the opportunity to identify and deconstruct these assumptions more than those who stay purely within their own field?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *