Subjectivity Through Self-Education:
Media and the Multicultural Citizen at the National Museum of the American Indian
- Miranda J. Brady, Carleton University, 1125 Colonel By Drive, 322 St. Pat’s, Ottawa, ON K1S 5B6, Canada Email: miranda.brady1@gmail.com
Source
September 2011 vol. 12 no. 5 441-459 Television New Media
Abstract
This article looks at the use of digital
kiosks and multimedia and multisensory presentation within the
Smithsonian Institution’s
National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI) in
Washington, D.C., to denaturalize assumptions about visitor and audience
subject formation. Museums like the NMAI include
numerous media technologies including multimedia presentations and
digital
kiosks as they vie for the attention of museum
visitors. Proponents of digital kiosks in public spaces argue that they
promote
active engagement among visitors by encouraging
“free-choice” learning, a process through which users make decisions
about
the content reviewed. This article argues that
“free-choice” learning makes several assumptions regarding subject
formation
and that these assumptions constrain understanding
of how media technologies shape meaning making potential in indigenous
museums. It suggests that the existence of digital
kiosks and multimedia presentations indicates disparate assumptions
about
visitor subjectivity and that these media are
integral to the “techniques of the self” performed by the museum visitor
as
a multicultural citizen.
Keywords
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