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Breves Reflexões sobre o Ensino e a Formação em Museologia
Jul 3, 2018 | Other publications, Publications
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Breves Reflexões sobre o Ensino e a Formação em Museologia, o Papel da Museologia no Trabalho de Museu e os Novos Profissionais de Museu [Brief Reflections on Teaching and Training in Museology, the Role of Museology in Museum Work and the New Museum Professionals]
- Graça Filipe
- 2018
- Boletim ICOM Portugal
- Issue 12
- 12-21
- Language: Portuguese
- ISSN: 183-3613
Excerpt:
Embora não a considere demonstrável, esta ideia expressa por Anne W. Ackerson parece-me interpelante sob vários pontos de vista, relacionando a possível escolha ou razão para trabalhar numa instituição museológica com o que hoje se entende por trabalho e profissão de museu, logo, com os conhecimentos e competências necessários ao longo de um tal percurso profissional.
Definir profissionais de museu implica necessariamente um conceito de museu. Tomarei como aplicáveis as definições do ICOM, segundo o qual, nos Estatutos aprovados em 2017, o termo profissionais de museu compreende «o conjunto dos membros do pessoal dos museus e das instituições como tal reconhecidas» − correspondendo pois à definição de museu que o próprio ICOM usa há mais de uma década e se inclui nos seus actuais Estatutos − «e as pessoas que num contexto profissional tenham como actividade principal fornecer serviços, conhecimentos e experiência aos museus e à comunidade museal» (ICOM 2017, artigo 3, secção 3, 3).
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![Illustrative banner for the lecture “Rice: ersatz, cultural artifact, object of knowledge, unruly crop”. With Lavinia Maddaluno, from Università Ca’ Foscari , IHC Visting Scholar 2024. The poster includes a photo of Lavinia Maddaluno.](https://ihc.fcsh.unl.pt/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/2024-07-16_Lavinia-Maddaluno_1200x500.jpg)
Event Details
Lecture with IHC’s 2024 Visiting Scholar Lavinia Maddaluno, on the socio-economic, cultural, scientific, technological, and medical responses to the expansion of rice cultivation in northern Italy.
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Event Details
Lecture with IHC’s 2024 Visiting Scholar Lavinia Maddaluno, on the socio-economic, cultural, scientific, technological, and medical responses to the expansion of rice cultivation in northern Italy.
Rice: ersatz, cultural artifact, object of knowledge, unruly crop
A dietary mainstay in non-European societies and a cornerstone of dishes like Northern Italian risotto, rice has diverse culinary significance. However, the timing of its introduction to Northern Italy remains unclear. Examining this event offers insights into the process of integrating new crops into both diet and cultural imagination. This talk is about the socio-economic, cultural, scientific, technological, and medical responses to the expansion of rice cultivation in northern Italy between the sixteenth and the eighteenth/early nineteenth centuries. Bringing together the history of knowledge and environmental history, in this talk I will reflect on how rice was appropriated by several actors, and on how these appropriations were intertwined with perceptions and constructions of the landscape and material environment. By interlacing narratives of rice cultivation and of the landscapes rice forms, alongside discussions of infrastructural development and knowledge systems, I will also delineate the progression of interactions between humans and their environments, as well as the evolution of water management practices, scientific advancements, medical understandings, and political-economic ideologies across different historical periods. Additionally, the talk will highlight how resources were conceptualized in the early modern period, reconnecting to contemporary debates on the Anthropocene and on the agency of non-humans.
About IHC’s 2024 Visiting Scholar:
Lavinia Maddaluno is Assistant Professor in early modern history at the Department of Humanities at Ca’ Foscari, Venice, working on David Gentilcore’s ERC project The Water Cultures of Italy 1500-1900. She is a historian of science interested in exploring the nexus between humans, nature and economy in early modern Europe. Lavinia has just completed her first monograph Science and political Economy in Enlightenment Milan (1760-1805), forthcoming with the Voltaire Foundation in autumn 2024. She is currently editing a book on rice in the Mediterranean with Rachele Scuro and a special issue on Water Knowledge with Giacomo Savani and Davide Martino. Lavinia has held multiple fellowships since the end of her PhD (Cambridge UK, 2018), from a Rome Fellowship at the British School at Rome, to a Max Weber Fellowship at the EUI and a joint Warburg/I Tatti Fellowship in the History of Science. More recently, she has been Fellow at the Fondation Maison des Sciences de l’Homme and the Fondazione Einaudi, working on a new project on rice-related knowledge networks between France and Italy in the Enlightenment.
Attendance is free.
Time
(Tuesday) 10:30 am - 12:30 pm
Organizer
Institute of Contemporary History — NOVA School of Social Sciences and Humanitiescomunicacao.ihc@fcsh.unl.pt Avenida de Berna, 26C - 1069-061 Lisbon
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