1st Edition

The Museum in Asia

Edited By Yunci Cai Copyright 2025
328 Pages 30 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

328 Pages 30 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

328 Pages 30 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

The Museum in Asia advances an understanding of the flourishing museum landscape in the region by offering a variety of conceptual tools and frameworks through which museum development can be analysed and understood. Informed by the key theoretical tenets of critical museology and heritage studies, this volume seeks to deconstruct the idea of museology and the museum phenomenon in East, South... Read more

List of figures

 

Series Preface

Sandra H. Dudley

 

Preface

Yunci Cai

 

Acknowledgements

Yunci Cai

 

List of Contributors       -

 

1       A Manifesto for Museums in Asia         

Yunci Cai

 

Section A:  Reconsidering Knowledge Structures

 

2          Numinous Objects and Their (Re)Contextualisation in Local Museologies    

Christina F. Kreps

 

3          Religion on Display: A Comparative Study of the Museum of World Religions and Exhibition Spaces in Temples in Taiwan  

Valentina Gamberi and Shu-Li Wang

 

4          Tracing the Lineage of Linear Exhibition Narratives in Chinese Museology      

David Francis

 

Section B: Rethinking Colonialism

 

5          Defining, Designating and Ruling the Other in the Spaces of the Raffles Museum, Singapore, 1823 – 1960

Chin Siew Elselt/Ang

 

6          ‘Unity in Diversity’: Museums and Representation in Myanmar  

Sandra H. Dudley

 

7          Swapping Time between Contemporary Ainu and Kaitaku Settler Colonial History           

Roslynn Ang

 

Section C: Localising Museums  

 

8          Transforming Chemde Museum: Monastic Curating and Co-Curating in a Tibetan Buddhist Monastery in Ladakh     

Louise Tythacott

 

9          Community-based Museums in Thailand and their Indigenous Curatorial Practices      

Paritta Chalermpow Koanantakool

 

10        Curating the Dead: A Case Study of Localising Strategies in a Private Museum in Vietnam

Graeme Were

 

11        Vaacha: Preservation and Erasure in an Indigenous Museum      

Alice Tilche      

 

Section D: Negotiating Politics

 

12        The Impact of India’s Partition on Museums of the Punjab         

Himanshu Prahba Ray

 

13        Exhibition Diplomacy: The Chinese Experience 

Da Kong

 

14        Jianchuan Museum Complex: Ethics and Politics in China’s Private Museum Practice         

Zhang Lisheng

 

15        Rethinking Heritage Diplomacy on the Maritime Silk Road        

Yunci Cai

 

16        Museums as Sites of Indigenous Revitalisation: Dialogues between National Museums, Indigenous Artisans, and Indigenous Communities in Taiwan

Marzia Varutti and Geoffrey Gowlland

 

Section E: Embracing Contemporaneity

 

17        Intersections between Private Lives, Public Housing, and National Narratives: Community Museums in Hong Kong and Singapore

Ian Y.H. Tan

 

18        A Systematic View on Digital Practices in Museums: Exploring the Contradictions That Museum Practitioners Experience in the Republic of Korea

Juhee Park

 

19        From Digitisation to Digital Repatriation: A Case Study of International Dunhuang Project

Zheng Zhang

 

20        Post-disaster Practices in Japanese Museums after the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami

Marina Masuda

 

Index

Biography

Yunci Cai is Associate Professor of Museum and Heritage Studies at the University of Leicester, United Kingdom. She has research interests in cultural politics and museologies in and out of Asia. Her monograph Staging Indigenous Heritage: Instrumentalisation, Brokerage and Representation in Malaysia (Routledge 2020) explores the cultural politics of four Indigenous cultural villages in Malaysia.

"At last, a comprehensive account of current museum developments in Asia, the new frontier of museology. Cai is an expert guide – inclusive, critical, balanced – while attending to politics, practice and, importantly, local perspectives."
Professor Conal McCarthy, Professor of Museum and Heritage Studies, Victoria University of Wellington

"The Museum in Asia is an exciting collection of essays, providing an important corrective to museological debates that are all too often determined by European and North American contexts. As Yunci Cai argues in her introductory manifesto, Asian museums must be understood within their own socio-historical, cultural and political contexts and needs. This is precisely what the critical perspectives presented in this book offer."

Professor Paul Basu, Curator at the Pitt Rivers Museum and Professor of Anthropology in the School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography, University of Oxford