Botanikkens Koloniale Rødder: Kulturhistorisk formidling af plantesamlinger i Storbritanniens botaniske haver
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Botanikkens Koloniale Rødder : Kulturhistorisk formidling af plantesamlinger i Storbritanniens botaniske haver. / Nielsen, Vibe.
In: Kulturstudier, Vol. 13, No. 2, 2022, p. 161-184.Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Botanikkens Koloniale Rødder
T2 - Kulturhistorisk formidling af plantesamlinger i Storbritanniens botaniske haver
AU - Nielsen, Vibe
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Like the Royal Botanic Gardens in Kew outside London, founded in 1759, the botanic garden in Oxford from 1621 has a long history that pre-dates the time during which the British Empire was the largest the world has ever seen. Despite their age, and the fact that the colonial era significantly transformed the specific organisational forms and roles of both gardens, their imperial legacies may not be immediately visible to their visitors. However, as this article demonstrates, both botanical gardens have deep roots in European colonialism – a legacy that nevertheless is only superficially communicated to the visiting public. Furthermore, Eurocentric naming traditions that celebrates “discoveries” made by white explorers are still part of the botanic practice although researchers in the field have become more aware about the importance of honouring indigenous places and people in their name-giving of new-found species. This article argues that botanic gardens, like other museum institutions open to the public, ought to be more aware of how they communicate the imperial legacies of their collections to their visitors. As it is now, the communication provided in both botanical gardens, through signs presenting the cultural history of selected plants and guided tours, partly reproduces excluding and Eurocentric celebrations of London and Oxford as the obvious epicentres of the world.
AB - Like the Royal Botanic Gardens in Kew outside London, founded in 1759, the botanic garden in Oxford from 1621 has a long history that pre-dates the time during which the British Empire was the largest the world has ever seen. Despite their age, and the fact that the colonial era significantly transformed the specific organisational forms and roles of both gardens, their imperial legacies may not be immediately visible to their visitors. However, as this article demonstrates, both botanical gardens have deep roots in European colonialism – a legacy that nevertheless is only superficially communicated to the visiting public. Furthermore, Eurocentric naming traditions that celebrates “discoveries” made by white explorers are still part of the botanic practice although researchers in the field have become more aware about the importance of honouring indigenous places and people in their name-giving of new-found species. This article argues that botanic gardens, like other museum institutions open to the public, ought to be more aware of how they communicate the imperial legacies of their collections to their visitors. As it is now, the communication provided in both botanical gardens, through signs presenting the cultural history of selected plants and guided tours, partly reproduces excluding and Eurocentric celebrations of London and Oxford as the obvious epicentres of the world.
KW - Det Humanistiske Fakultet
KW - botanical gardens
KW - Decolonisation
KW - United Kingdom
KW - Kew Gardens
KW - University of Oxford
M3 - Tidsskriftartikel
VL - 13
SP - 161
EP - 184
JO - Kulturstudier
JF - Kulturstudier
SN - 1904-5352
IS - 2
ER -
ID: 391166504