Book contents
- Institutions of Literature, 1700–1900
- Institutions of Literature, 1700–1900
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction Literature and Institutions
- Chapter 1 Knowledge Exchange in the Seventeenth Century
- Chapter 2 ‘Supporting Mutual Benevolence’
- Chapter 3 Institutions without Addresses
- Chapter 4 Eighteenth-Century Musenhof Courts as Bridges and Brokers for Cultural Networks and Social Reform
- Chapter 5 Becoming Institutional
- Chapter 6 Circulating Libraries as Institutional Creators of Genres
- Chapter 7 Lecturing Networks and Cultural Institutions, 1740–1830
- Chapter 8 Catalogues as Instituting Genres of the Nineteenth-Century Museum
- Chapter 9 Charles Lamb and the British Museum as an Institution of Literature
- Chapter 10 A Disruptive and Dangerous Education and the Wealth of the Nation
- Chapter 11 ‘The Ladies’ Contribution’
- Chapter 12 ‘[L]etters Must Increase’
- Chapter 13 Networks, Nodes, and Beacons
- Chapter 14 The Book as Medium
- Index
Chapter 8 - Catalogues as Instituting Genres of the Nineteenth-Century Museum
The Two Hunterians
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 June 2022
- Institutions of Literature, 1700–1900
- Institutions of Literature, 1700–1900
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction Literature and Institutions
- Chapter 1 Knowledge Exchange in the Seventeenth Century
- Chapter 2 ‘Supporting Mutual Benevolence’
- Chapter 3 Institutions without Addresses
- Chapter 4 Eighteenth-Century Musenhof Courts as Bridges and Brokers for Cultural Networks and Social Reform
- Chapter 5 Becoming Institutional
- Chapter 6 Circulating Libraries as Institutional Creators of Genres
- Chapter 7 Lecturing Networks and Cultural Institutions, 1740–1830
- Chapter 8 Catalogues as Instituting Genres of the Nineteenth-Century Museum
- Chapter 9 Charles Lamb and the British Museum as an Institution of Literature
- Chapter 10 A Disruptive and Dangerous Education and the Wealth of the Nation
- Chapter 11 ‘The Ladies’ Contribution’
- Chapter 12 ‘[L]etters Must Increase’
- Chapter 13 Networks, Nodes, and Beacons
- Chapter 14 The Book as Medium
- Index
Summary
This chapter makes a case for writing the institutional history of museums as the history of process. Rather than focusing on the choices of individuals or structural elements that uphold museums’ claims to permanence and stability, I examine manuscript and published catalogues to excavate the nineteenth-century museum’s ‘procedural rhetoric’, the way processes were used persuasively to support systems of meaning and instil specific values. Through comparative analysis of the Hunterian museums in London and Glasgow, I argue that processes of sequencing, labelling and organizing objects on paper were deployed to forge and consolidate, or, alternatively, disrupt and dispute, each museum’s nascent institutional identity. Catalogues function as ‘instituting genres’—that is, genres of writing that enact and thereby make visible the dynamic processes of institutional formation and evolution.
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- Institutions of Literature, 1700–1900 , pp. 157 - 177Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022