At the AAM conference this year I was privileged to be a member of a panel in a session, Interpreting Human Tragedy: In Memoriam, which sprang from last fall's issue of Exhibitionist on the same topic for which we had all written. Stacey Mann of Night Kitchen Interactive took the lead in organizing our session. I joined Stacey,
Danny
M. Cohen, Ph. D. of Northwestern
University, School of Education and Social Policy; Ian
Kerrigan, Assistant Director of
Exhibition Development at the National September 11 Memorial Museum and Wendy
Aibel-Weiss, Director of Exhibits
and Education, Tribute WTC Visitors Center.
We really wanted this session to be a conversation, so Stacey encouraged us to take a leap of faith and not do any sort of formal papers or presentations. In several conference calls, we brainstormed questions that were interesting to us, and we hoped interesting to an audience. Stacey began with a brief framing of the issues-which included an invitation to the audience to ask questions at any time--and turned to us, squished together on the tiny stage, and began asking questions.
It was so gratifying to have people come up to the microphone and ask such thoughtful questions, and to feel that our own thinking out loud, pondering responses, perhaps provides a better model for our work than the reading of papers. So here, a recap of key ideas/questions and comments, as they came forth in the session. It's a long post, but I hope worth reading. Please continue the conversation by sharing your comments below and many, many thanks to Stacey, Ian, Danny, Wendy, and all of you who participated (and shared via your tweets.)
We talked about how memorials can tell stories...but importantly, as Ian mentioned, that these museums take memories combined with, as he put it, "agreed-upon facts." But those agreed-upon facts often feel a burden, as it is becomes a way of codifying history. The challenge in the 9/11 museum, opening later this year, is to share, to audiences, the event that changed the world as we know it. And with a changing world, how to design for future audiences and events. But Danny reminded us, that "ownership" of events often leads to definitions that may exclude other groups and other narratives.
Place really matters...the fact that an event, whatever it is, happened here. So Holocaust museums in the United States or elsewhere outside Europe, or in my own experience, the Chernobyl Museum in Kyiv vs. actually visiting Chernobyl, are entirely different experiences and mean entirely different things to visitors. Place is powerful.
That discussion of place led to a consideration of these places of tragedy as sacred spaces--and the struggle many have with cell phone pictures, teenagers giggling and the like. Danny, whose deep experience in Holocaust education brought a broad perspective to our conversation, mentioned two important responses to what some seem as inappropriate behavior. One, that many survivors comment that they're okay with the noisy groups of young people--that those young people are alive, representing the future denied so many; that it can be seen as almost a joyful affirmation/antidote to the tragedy. Second, he reminded us that these are often traumatizing sites or exhibits and what seem to be inappropriate responses are really coping mechanisms.
And then the questions really began from the audience. One asked about the inclusion of images of dead bodies in an exhibit on the Armenian genocide. Should the images be shown in a way that you have to make a choice to see, as at the Holocaust Museum in DC? Are there other approaches? The purpose of these images may be only to shock or provoke, and as a learning scientist, Danny feels strongly that provocation is harmful to a real learning process. The goal, in a thoughtful, reflective museum, should be to move a visitor from a purely emotional response to an intellectual, reflective, analytical response. Mere shock never does that.
A staff member from a military museum asked about issues of including the enemy, particularly in exhibitions about recent US wars--and how to depict the enemy. Danny asked how often, for instance, exhibitions about the Holocaust show Nazis in any way but in uniform. He reminded us that these were people, with families, with emotions--that by showing them only in uniform, we may wiggle out of the consideration of our own human responsibility.
A question about interpreting the site of a Native American massacre brought conversation--and many shared ideas from the audience-- about the responsibility of the victors, whoever they may be, in interpreting history--a museum's responsibility of balance to create an exhibition that really provides, through the active involvement of communities affected, multiple perspectives. From a 19th century event in the American West to African revolutions...for an exhibit about social media and African revolutions, the question, "can we trust social media to properly document revolution?" From someone on our panel (ah, my note-taking fails me), the idea that we have to trust that our visitors are capable of the same question--and of thinking about the answers. Perhaps those questions can be asked of the exhibit's visitors.
And a question for us about what the take-away message of memorials and memorial museums could or should be. As a group, we tried to puzzle out an answer. The first phase of a project might be memorialization, often driven by what the victims feel is appropriate. The second might be education--just that our audiences gain basic knowledge and facts. But the third stage is how we inspire action, how to ensure that we, as individuals, as I somewhat inelegantly phrased it, make a decision about whether we are Oskar Schindler or wimps.
I'd been procrastinating about writing this post, worried about doing justice to the thoughtful panelists and audience members, but today I was reminded how important this work can be when I read this NY Times article about the extremely ad hoc, personal, dangerous, underground--and inspiring-- efforts underway by Syrian citizens to provide food, shelter, medical care and other support to Syrian communities under attack by their own government. Said one university student involved in the work, “All our lives we were raised to be afraid. But you get to a point where you
realize you are strong because you can speak and do.”
And of course, as museums, we have powerful voices to raise. We can also be strong because we can speak and do.
Image: Memorial gate, where people from all over the world have left
momentos to honor the victims of the September 11, 2001 terrorist
hijacking of Flight 93. Shanksville, Pennsylvania by Carol Highsmith, Library of Congress collection