Scarecrow Press
Pages: 252
Trim: 6⅛ x 9¼
978-0-8108-5865-7 • Paperback • February 2007 • $98.00 • (£75.00)
978-1-4616-6940-1 • eBook • February 2007 • $93.00 • (£72.00)
Scott Magelssen is associate professor of Theatre at Bowling Green State University. He has published articles on living history museums in many theatre journals, including Theatre History Studies and The Drama Review. The author won the 2005 Gerald Kahan Award for the Best Essay in Theatre Studies by a Younger Scholar for his article "Performance Practices of [Living] Open-Air Museums (And a New Look at 'Skansen' in American Living Museum Discourse)," published in Theatre History Studies in 2004.
Part 1 Acknowledgments
Part 2 Introduction
Part 3 Chapter 1 The Dilemmas of Contemporary Living History Museum Historiography in Theory and Practice
Chapter 4 The Progressive Development Narrative of Living History Museum History
Chapter 5 Progressive Histories: Major Works
Chapter 6 The Progressive Development Narrative in Practice
Chapter 7 (In)authentic Revolutions: Time, Space, and Living History Museums
Chapter 8 Plimoth Plantation
Chapter 9 Colonial WIlliamsburg
Chapter 10 Old Sturbridge Village
Chapter 11 Storytelling vs. Scientific Discourse
Part 12 Chapter 2 Toward a New Genealogy of Living History Museum Performance
Chapter 13 A Historiography of Immanence
Chapter 14 Defining the Episteme
Chapter 15 An Emergence within a Shifting Field
Chapter 16 Capitalizing on the Past—Capitalizing on Loss
Chapter 17 Social History and the Trajectory of Living Museum Performance
Chapter 18 The Naturalistic Ideal
Chapter 19 Living History as Pleasure
Part 20 Chapter 3 Performace as Historiography at Living History Museums
Chapter 21 The Historiography of Performance
Chapter 22 The Field
Chapter 23 Missed Opportunities
Chapter 24 Alternatives to the Naturalistic Mode
Chapter 25 Post-Tourists and Living History Performace
Part 26 Conclusion
Part 27 Appendix: Selected Living History Programming Sites
Part 28 Bibliography
Part 29 Index
Part 30 About the Author
After outlining a new history of these performances in the United States and Europe, Magelssen offers suggestions for their improvement, which he sates is achievable if museums abandon their 'just-the-facts' mentality and embrace alternative modes of performance.
— Museum News
...points out the dilemmas of living interpretation, from misleading visitors about time and history to perpetuating outmoded linear views of historical progress.
— Zentralblatt für Geologie und Paläontologie
An external researcher rather than a participant in living museums or a particular fan of them, Magelssen (theater arts, Augustana College, Illinois), examines the performance practices, philosophies, and curatorial methods they have used to stage the past through the 20th and into the 21st centuries, and how they see themselves as the very products of these practices.
— Reference and Research Book News