Making kin is more than metaphor: Implications of responsibilities toward Indigenous knowledge and artistic traditions for museums

Author:

Isaac Gwyneira1ORCID,Burgio‐Ericson Klint2,McChesney Lea3,Green Adriana Greci4,Charley Karen Kahe5,Church Kelly6,Dillard Renee Wasson7

Affiliation:

1. Curator of North American Ethnology, National Museum of Natural History Smithsonian Institution Washington District of Columbia USA

2. Assistant Professor, Art History of the Americas Texas Tech University Lubbock Texas USA

3. Ethnology Curator, Maxwell Museum University of New Mexico Albuquerque New Mexico USA

4. Curator of Indigenous Arts of the Americas, the Fralin Museum of Art University of Virginia Charlottesville Virginia USA

5. Hopi Keams Canyon Arizona USA

6. Gun Lake Pottawatomi and Ottawa Hopkins Michigan USA

7. Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Harbor Springs Michigan USA

Abstract

AbstractMany Indigenous communities do not regard objects as inanimate, but rather as animate kin. Based on our work as a collaborative group of museum coordinators and Hopi, Anishinaabe, and Penobscot artists, we explore narratives and kinship concepts emerging from working with collections of baskets and pottery. We question how recent theoretical conceptualizations of kinship have become overly rhetorical and, therefore, risk diminishing the tangible responsibilities that Indigenous knowledge systems teach. We explore how the new social networks forged through collaborative practices implicate museum personnel in kinship‐like relationships, which raises the question: What are the critical lessons museums can learn from the work of making and sustaining kin? Conventional western museology rarely contemplates these imperatives. The implications for museums that come with recognizing such networks are not only about conceptualizing kin in new ways, but also developing shared ethical protocols and responsibilities toward Indigenous knowledge and the environment over multiple generations.

Funder

Smithsonian Institution

Publisher

Wiley

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