AltaMira Press
Pages: 198
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7591-1180-6 • Hardback • September 2008 • $124.00 • (£95.00)
978-0-7591-1181-3 • Paperback • March 2010 • $39.00 • (£30.00)
Ian Jones is the Secretary of CAMOC (Collections and Activities of Museums of Cities), one of the international committees forming part of the International Council of Museums. Robert R. Macdonald is director emeritus, Museum of the City of New York, where he previously served as CEO for 17 years. Darryl McIntyre has been group director for public programs at the Museum of London since November 2003.
Chapter 1. Cities and Museums about Them
Chapter 2. City Museums and the Geopolitics of Globalization
Chapter 3. Museums of Cities and the Future of Cities
Chapter 4. "The Novelties of the Town:" Museums, Cities, and Historical Representation
Chapter 5. The Prospect of a City Museum
Chapter 6. Thinking the Present Historically at the Museum of Sydney, Sydney, Australia
Chapter 7. A City Museum for Stuttgart: Some Issues in Planning a Museum for the 21st Century
Chapter 8. Taipei City Museum in the Making
Chapter 9. Museums and Urban Renewal in Towns
Chapter 10. The Development of the City of Kazan: The Museum Aspect
Chapter 11. Defining a Research Agenda for City Museums in a Peripheralizing World
Chapter 12. From Urban Blocks to City Blogs: Defining Attributes for the City Museum of Today
Cities need museums as people need memories: not as a repository of their past, but as a token of their identity and a guide to the future. Here is a unique survey of city museums from five continents to stimulate discussion about such museums' varied functions – from archive to development workshop.
— Joseph Rykwert, University of Pennsylvania; author of The Seduction of Place: The City in the Twenty-First Century
A far more compelling book than others of its kind.
— Museums Journal, February 2009
Books that arise from conferences are often uneven and poorly structured butCity Museums and City Development is an exception.
— ReCollections
This book brings together the latest thinking and scholarship on a topic that is critical to the future of all museums. City museums, more than any other topic specific cultural institutions, not only carry the seeds of memory but bear the responsibility of reflecting the increasingly diverse populations they serve. These museums, through their programs, bring relevance to their various publics, serve as places of discussion and civil discourse, and ultimately inform and enlighten their citizens.
— Sal Cilella, Director, Atlanta History Center
The contents should both inspire and challenge anyone working in a history museum, especially one in an urban setting.
— AASLH History News