Abstract
Abstract
Museums offer rich material environments for studying narration as jointly accomplished by institutions and
audiences. Following the narrative and participatory turns museums have taken, the research explores the narrative actions
audiences’ texts perform vis-à-vis museums’ narrations. It examines audience participation in two history museums, as elicited by
response vehicles – onsite media that serve to invite and capture audience written responses. The research argues that museum
response vehicles offer narrative affordances and entitlements, which shape how audiences negotiate participation as publicly
documented and displayed. Comparative findings indicate that participation is shaped by response vehicles’ spatio-material
affordances, including how brief textual segments function as audience-based contributions in and to the historical narration. A
range of audience-generated narrative actions, entitlements, and speech acts are discerned and discussed, which typically conform
with, but sometimes ‘override’, museums’ affordances. These narrative actions shed light on the mechanics, politics and policies
of public narration and agency.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),History,Education
Cited by
4 articles.
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