SENSUS
HISTORIAE
ISSN 2082–0860
Vol. VI (2012/1)
s. 93-113
Erica Fontana
San Diego
he “New Museum” in Poland
Introduction
I
begin this article with a disclaimer of sorts, in the form of an as-yetunanswered question. What does an American researcher have to contribute
to the understanding of Polish history and culture? he question remains
important, and diicult to answer, for an anthropologist, even 25 years
after Fischer and Marcus (1986) irst wrote of the “crisis of representation”
in the human sciences.1 I hope that, in bringing my own culturally shaped
experiences, interests, and training into an intercultural dialogue with
those of the museum workers I will be interviewing, I can contribute to the
production of knowledge that will be valuable for all involved.
My research training is in journalistic interviewing as well as in cultural
anthropology, with a focus on psychological and media anthropology
traditions. In a very broad sense, I am interested in how thought and
experience are—and are not—constructed by cultural experience, and I
think that one of the most efective and most interesting ways of exploring
this issue in speciic contexts is by examining individual life stories. Our
environments do, of course, in some ways afect our subjective experience
and cultural, social, and psychological processes, but I do not think culture
or social structure can ever construct individuals in any totalizing manner.
Understood according to the concept of discourses,2 cultural and social
formations can be powerful in structuring action, but are always multiple and
Fischer, Michael M.J., and George Marcus, Anthropology as Cultural Critique: An
Experimental Moment in the Human Sciences, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1986.
1
Foucault, Michel, “What Is an Author?” In he Foucault Reader, ed. Paul Rabinow, New
York: Pantheon Books, 2004: 101-120.
2
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in tension rather than monolithic. Individuals and groups work within social
constraints, crafting spaces for agency and using available cultural materials
in the efort to create a meaningful life, even in diicult social conditions.3
Among the most important materials that are drawn on in this process, by
both individuals and groups, are historical objects, myths, narratives, and
rituals—those materials that are drawn upon to link the present with the
past, positing a continuous identity over time.
he production of particular narratives of identity necessarily involves
leaving out or de-emphasizing some things, while emphasizing others.4 hese
dematerialized resources are never fully erased, though, leaving behind traces
that can be potentially appropriated as resources for alternative identities.5
Individuals and groups may alternate contextually between diferent
identities drawn from diferent resources of memory and symbolism.6
From the perspective of identity formation, maintenance, and
reconstruction, research in Central and Eastern Europe, and Poland
in particular, presents interesting case studies. Much of the Englishlanguage research on this region of the world deals with the political and
economic dimensions of state socialism and its aftermath. Social and
cultural researchers working in this region, however, have articulated
repeatedly many of the ways in which spheres of freedom existed despite
an apparently totalitarian state socialist system, and in which the transition
out of socialism—drastic and rapid from a political perspective in many
places—was from a social and cultural perspective much more gradual and
unpredictable.7 In Poland’s case, the last few centuries have included
3
Cf. Holland, Dorothy, William Lachicotte Jr., Debra Skinner, and Carole Cain, Identity
and Agency in Cultural Worlds, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1998; Ruti, Mari,
Reinventing the Soul: Posthumanist heory and Psychic Life. New York: Other Press, 2006.
4
Irwin-Zarecka, Iwona, Neutralizing Memory: he Jew in Contemporary Poland, New
Brunswick and Oxford: Transaction Publishers, 1989; idem, Frames of Remembrance, New
Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publishers, 1994.
5
Trouillot, Michel-Rolph, Silencing the Past: Power and the Production of History, Boston:
Beacon Press, 1995; Yoneyama, Lisa, Hiroshima Traces: Time, Space, and the Dialectics of
Memory, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999.
6
Ewing, Katherine P., “he Illusion of Wholeness: Culture, Self, and the Experience of
Inconsistency,” Ethos, 18 (3), 1990: 251-278.
Berdahl, Daphne, Matti Bunzl and Martha Lampland, Altering States: Ethnographies of
Transition in Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union, Ann Arbor: University of Michigan
Press, 2000; Burawoy, Michael and Katherine Verdery, eds., Uncertain Transition: Ethnographies
of Change in the Postsocialist World. Lanham: Rowman and Littleield, 1999; Lampland, Martha,
he Object of Labor: Commodiication in Socialist Hungary, Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
1995.
7
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The “New Museum” in Poland
not only the presence of two totalitarian governments, but also
drastic border and population changes, including over 100 years of
partition during which the Polish nation ceased to be represented by
a physical state. Nevertheless, publicly available historical narratives,
including those in museums, often posit continuity, tradition, and
homogeneity. However, alternative narratives are increasingly being
made public, many of which draw on Poland’s pre-World War II history
as a multiethnic state. I am interested both in how—according to what
historical resources—existing narratives of the nation are maintained
and how new ones are formed and legitimized.
hree main focuses motivate my research project. First, my research
examines the concrete practices of memory and history work that occur
“behind the scenes” of public representations—i.e., work in physical and
virtual-world museums that present varied images of the Polish nation
and its culture and history. I am interested in the speciics of how stories,
artifacts, historical events, etc. are used to create, support, reshape, and
challenge images of Polish culture and history, and how this happens
locally. In other words, I am interested in tracing the speciic assemblages8
of factors—local stories and artifacts, individual museum workers, and
local institutional structures—that articulate with large-scale narratives
and oicial structures—themselves rapidly changing—to produce
representations of Polish identity. While it appears clear based on visits and
press coverage of recently opened or soon-to-be-opened museums in Poland,
and globally, that multimedia and interactivity are becoming commonplace
museum features, it is less clear how museum content is developing. hus, I
am interested in whether, and if so, in what ways, these images are changing
in recent years in relation to the increased freedom of discussion following
the end of state socialism and the social and political changes associated
with Poland’s accession to the European Union, and in people’s opinions
about these changing images. How is history drawn on to present national
identity/ies?
Secondly, my project examines the individual life stories and motivations
of the individuals who take part in this memory and history work. In my
opinion, examining local, concrete practices of memory and history work
may be as informative, if not more so, than examining in them on a larger
scale, because local practices are grounded in the concrete experiences of
individuals and thus may reveal a more complex interplay of forces and
motivations. he focus on individuals will, I hope, also provide a corrective
Deleuze, Gilles, and Felix Guattari, A housand Plateaus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia,
Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1987.
8
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Erica Fontana
to one of the inherent dangers of a focus on the “production” rather than the
“consumption” side of museum work—that is, the possibility of discovering
in my research only oicial museum narratives that do not necessarily relect
the diverse background of perspectives, interpretations, and meanings out
of which these museums developed and against which they are interpreted.
I am interested not only in the memory work that is taking place, but by
whom it is being conducted, and why. Who is telling their individual stories
publicly, and who is remaining silent? Are people’s motivations for getting
involved with memory work personal or otherwise? In particular for those
with little or no personal experience of life in pre-1989 Poland, including
younger generations and people outside Poland, what motivates involvement
(or lack thereof) with these historical concerns? In the case of memory work
involving formerly present, but now largely absent populations (e.g., the
Jews in Poland) and national and ethnic minorities, how, and by whom, is
this work undertaken?
Finally, I am interested in the more global dimensions of public
history and social change. Not only historical content, but the media of its
presentation, are deeply bound up with their form and uses and the way in
which they are treated in public discourse. In Poland, a shift has taken place
from “underground,” smaller-scale forms of memory work (such as personal
histories and unoicial publications) to larger-scale public discourse (not
only a shift toward free media and speech within Poland, but, for instance,
large-scale national museums visited by both Poles and foreigners). he
increasing prevalence of computer- and Internet-based media has furthered
this shift, in enabling not only a wider national and international public for
historical concerns, but also entirely diferent forms of commemoration
(e.g., “virtual museums” such as the Virtual Shtetl (http://www.sztetl.org.
pl/), tourism and culture blogs, and virtual information stations providing
historical information, like those found in Łódź and Poznań, among other
cities). On one hand, local assemblages of historical facts, individuals, and
interpretations of national discourses draw on, and create, speciic meanings.
On the other, the forms of presentation of such histories create publics for
whom they become meaningful and often contentious. herefore, I also
plan to examine how these shifts in the media in which history is presented
change the structure of public discourse about it, and therefore the character
of memory.
Historical Background
he historical, political, and cultural background against which museums
displaying Polish historical and cultural museums are realized is complex
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The “New Museum” in Poland
and fraught with implications for both the understanding of Poland’s past
and its future. Historical truth is materialized in diferent ways for diferent
purposes, and local histories are woven into national ones in particular ways.
In the process, diferent readings of the past and the elements that make
them up are made to mean diferent things.9 he development of a historically
conscious national identity is not only an academic one, but a popular one
as well. hrough practices and ceremonies involving everyday people, the
meanings of historical events are shaped.10 he historical development of
Polish national identity through the co-articulation of particular meanings
and symbols in particular historical and cultural contexts can be traced by
examining it over time. In doing so, the diferent ways in which it is being
reasserted and re-signiied in contemporary contexts can also be analyzed.
he politics of history have been an important source of recent debate in
Poland, both within the academy and in public spaces. his historical debate
is important not only for understanding Poland’s past, but for shaping its
future identity. Genevieve Zubrzycki11 has identiied a dominant “national
mythology” in Poland, reproduced in visual and material cultures and both
shaped by historical events and reproduced in retellings of history, that is
composed of two core myths: (1) that of Poland as intrinsically Catholic;
(2) that of Poland as “martyred for the sins of the world and resurrected
for the world’s salvation.”12 he irst of these two core myths was made
evident in, to give one recent example, the “War of the Crosses” described
by Zubrzycki.13 Zubrzycki’s book deals with the ways in which this particular
concept of Polish national identity, and its associated framing of history, was
debated by at least two factions at one particular site, that of the Auschwitz
concentration camp. he site now stands as a museum and memory site
commemorating the lives, and deaths, of those murdered in the Holocaust,
and as a place individuals visit to commemorate and understand the past.14
9
Brown, Keith, he Past in Question: Modern Macedonia and the Uncertainties of Nation,
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2003.
10
Lampland, Martha, “he Politics of History: Historical Consciousness and the
Hungarian Revolutions of 1848/49,” Hungarian Studies, 6(2), 1990: 185-194; eadem, “Death
of a Hero: Hungarian National Identity and the Funeral of Lajos Kossuth,” Hungarian Studies
8(1), 1993: 29-35.
11
Zubrzycki, Genevieve, he Crosses of Auschwitz: Nationalism and Religion in PostCommunist Poland, Chicago: he University of Chicago Press, 2006, 20112.
12
Zubrzycki, Genevieve, “History and the National Sensorium: Making Sense of Polish
Mythology,” Qualitative Sociology, 34, 2011: p. 26.
13
Zubrzycki 2006.
Kugelmass, Jack, “Missions to the Past: Poland in Contemporary Jewish hought
and Deed,” in Tense Past: Cultural Essays in Trauma and Memory, eds. Paul Antze and Michael
Lambek, New York and London: Routledge, 1996, pp. 199-213.
14
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he second of these core myths developed primarily during the 20th century,
and framed Poles as “victims cheated by history, abandoned by friends,
and invaded by foes.”15 A third dimension of dominant national mythology
concerns the image of “Poland as the heroic ighter Za naszą i waszą wolność
(For our freedom and yours).”16
National myths in the sense that Zubrzycki uses the term are “stories
that are posited by a given social collective as real, true and important.”17
She emphasizes that this particular mythology, although dominant, is not
hegemonic.18 It is open to contestation, more so in certain conditions and
historical moments than in others—implying the existence of other sources
of historical meaning. Zubrzycki argues19 that on one hand, the end of
communism was understood according to this dominant national mythology
as “the latest phase in the story of Poland’s ight for independence.”20 On
the other, debates over national identity and historical truth have both
destabilized and challenged these myths in an independent, globally
connected Poland.
Since 1989, and particularly within the past decade, this national
mythology has come into question as both historical truth and its meaning
for Polish national identity have become subjects of complex and heated
public debate. he factors afecting these changes are numerous and have
shaped the situation in multiple directions, but some of the most important
debates have concerned challenges to and reairmations of long-standing
national narratives and their meaning, as well as oicial attitudes toward
and policies concerning history.
he appearance of diferent historical perspectives and “debunking” of
oicial and dominant national memory in public space after 1989 was the
source of important debates. his process is perhaps exempliied by one
of the most famous of these controversies, the publication of Jan Tomasz
Gross’ book Sąsiedzi (Neighbors) (2000),21 which described the 1941 murder
of the Jewish residents of the town of Jedwabne by their Polish neighbors,
15
Zubrzycki 2006, ibid., p. xiii.
Shore, Marci, “Conversing with Ghosts: Jedwabne, Żydokomuna, and Totaliarianism,”
Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 6(2), 2005: p. 349.
16
17
Zubrzycki 2011, p. 22.
18
Ibid., p. 26.
19
Ibid., pp. 37-38.
20
Ibid., p. 38.
Gross, Jan Tomasz, Sąsiedzi: historia zagłady żydowskiego miasteczka, Sejny: Fundacja
Pogranicze, 2000.
21
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The “New Museum” in Poland
and which provoked a great deal of public interest and debate, some of which
continues today.22
he past takes on the role of symbolic capital among politicians in
particular.23 he idea of “new historical policy,” or simply “historical policy”
became inluential in public discourse about the past in Poland in the mid2000s. he term refers to a controversial set of political programs concerning
the public treatment of history, whose vision of patriotism tends to be
characterized more by the promotion of past glories and the building of a
sense of national pride than by accounting with diicult past events.24 Among
the concerns raised in both academic and public debates around the topic
of historical policy are questions about the actual and proper relationships
among knowledge, identity, and ideology within Polish historiography and
museography.25
Deining the New Museum
In the absence of what Pierre Nora calls milieux de mémoire—spaces of
lived and experienced memory—memory is retained in particular places,
or lieux de mémoire, in which the past is deliberately evoked and preserved.
Lieux de mémoire are produced, Nora writes, to protect against the sweeping
away of lived memory by history, a threat which he sees as inherent to
the modern era.26 A museum is a particular kind of public display—and
lieu de mémoire—connected with collective memory and national identity.
Museums understood as lieux de mémoire are distinctive for the way they
organize knowledge and meaning. First of all, museums, because of their
connection with academic and oicial structures, are associated with science
and knowledge, and thus seen as authoritative. Secondly, museum collections
and narratives provide semiotic paradigms for the interpretation of their
contents.27 In being displayed in a museum, objects—material artifacts
as well as stories, photographs, etc.—become part of the collection, being
22
Shore 2005.
Korzeniewski, Bartosz, Transformacja Pamięci. Przewartościowania w pamięci przeszłości
a wybrane aspekty funkcjonowania dyskursu publicznego o przeszłości w Polsce po 1989 roku,
Poznań: Wydawnictwo Poznańskiego Towarzystwa Przyjaciół Nauk, 2010, p. 8.
23
24
Korzeniewski 2010, p. 205.
25
Pamięć jako przedmiot władzy, Warszawa: Fundacja im. Stefana Batorego, 2008.
Nora, Pierre, “Between Memory and History: Les Lieux de Mémoire,” Representations,
26, 1989, pp. 12-13.
26
Baudrillard, Jean, “he system of collecting,” in J. Elsner and R. Cardinal, eds. he
cultures of collecting, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1994, pp. 7-24.
27
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Erica Fontana
resigniied within the museum’s narrative in addition to retaining whatever
original meaning or function they may have had.28
Museums are also connected with collective memory. hey both relect
the social and political culture29 and help to shape collective memory.30
Individuals visiting museums partake in what Carol Duncan calls “rituals
of citizenship”, airming their identiication with the group represented
therein and to some degree with the particular images of that group that
are being presented.31 Museums are connected with public memory, and the
publics of memory, at local, national, and transnational levels, because they
draw on resources of meaning at all these levels.
Do “new museums” understood in a global context, comprise a deinable
category? It is diicult to say. While in some ways it appears that historical
and cultural museums are shifting in the way they present their subject
matter, there is indeed a great deal of continuity with regard to both form
and content between museums conceived and constructed within the last
few decades and older institutions. Older ideologies underlying museums,
including the ideas of the museum as “cabinet of curiosities” and modernist
temple of science and knowledge have not disappeared, but coexist, often in
tense relationships, with newer and theoretically more democratic ideas, for
instance, that of the museum as space for the dialogue of multiple voices32
or critical institution.33 In all of these models, the museum retains its power
as the arbiter of dialogue, providing the institutional framing for visitors’
interpretations.
However, a few prominent general tendencies in recent museum
developments can be discerned, and can also be linked to global cultural
28
Baudrillard 1994, ibid., pp. 7-24; Cliford, James, he predicament of culture: twentiethcentury ethnography, literature, and art, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1988;
Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, Barbara, Destination Culture: Tourism, Museums, and Heritage. Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1988.
29
Jules-Rosette, Bennetta, and Erica Fontana, “’Le Musée d’Art au Hasard’: Responses
of Black Paris to French Museum Culture,” African and Black Diaspora, 2, 2 (July), 2009, pp.
213-229.
30
Żychlińska, Monika, “Muzeum Powstania Warszawskiego jako wehikuł polskiej pamięci
zbiorowej,” Kultura i Społeczeństwo, rok LIII, nr 3, 2009.
31
Duncan, Carol, “Art Museums and the Ritual of Citizenship,” in Exhibiting Cultures: he
Poetics and Politics of Museum Display, eds. Ivan Karp and Steven D. Lavine, Washington and
London: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1991, pp. 11-12.
32
his can have varying results; see, for instance, Jules-Rosette and Fontana (2009) on
the Musée de Quai Branly in Paris, which promotes itself as an institution “where cultures
converse” (Là où dialoguent les cultures).
33
100
Piotrowski, Piotr, Muzeum krytyczne, Poznań: Dom Wydawniczy REBIS, 2011.
The “New Museum” in Poland
trends. Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett34 describes a “crisis of identity”
experienced by museums in recent years. As museums have had to compete
with other, increasingly accessible, forms of entertainment “within a tourism
industry that privileges experience, immediacy, and what the industry calls
adventure,” and have come to rely increasingly on earned income, they have
had to shape their forms of presentation to it visitors’ desires. In connection
with this, and perhaps related to the fact that a large part of museum
audiences have historically been made up of children, youth, and students,
the museum’s role has come to be seen as one of entertainment in addition
to, or in place of, its mission of education.35 he museum as “theme park” has
become a familiar comparison and critique.36 his description is prompted
by immersive, experiential displays that on one hand provide visitors with
new sensory and emotional dimensions of encountering history and culture,
but on the other have been described by some visitors as overwhelming and
disorienting. he idea of the museum as theme park also raises questions
about the depth and seriousness of the presentation of material.
In keeping with this entertainment role, many newer museums act as
multipurpose arts and cultural centers, hosting a variety of events such
as concerts, games, parties and movie screenings37 and often designating
space speciically for these purposes in their construction, as in the Warsaw
Rising Museum.38 A brief look at the events calendar for this museum—
described in tourist guides as well as by many people I have talked with as
an example of a technologically and aesthetically contemporary museum in
Poland—revealed such diverse events as an Independence Day concert on
November 11 and a game for families and children that encouraged them
to walk around the city space looking for unusual sights in Warsaw. Many
such events are connected with themes in popular and youth culture. For
instance, the Musée de Quai Branly, a museum recently built in Paris which
displays objects from African, Oceanian, American, and Asian civilizations,
in eforts to attract young visitors, put on a Tarzan-themed exhibit39 and a
showing of the ilm Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.
34
Ibid., p. 7.
Sayre, Shay, and Cynthia M. King, Entertainment & Society: Audiences, Trends, and
Impacts, housand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 2003, pp. 42-43.
35
E.g., Choay, Françoise, “Branly: Un nouveau Luna Park est-il necessaire?” Urbanisme,
350, 2006, pp. 4-9.
36
37
Sayre and King 2003, p. 43.
38
Żychlińska 2009.
Musée du Quai Branly, Préparez votre visite, accessed August 10, 2009 from http://
www.quaibranly/fr/en, 2009; Tarzan! Ou Rousseau chez les Waziri (catalogue), Paris: Éditions
Somogy and Musée du Quai Branly, 2009.
39
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Erica Fontana
Technology has played an important role in shaping contemporary
museums. Familiar technologies such as audio guides and, more recently,
touch-screen displays installed in museums enable visitors to explore topics
in more depth according to their own interests and at their discretion,
although nevertheless still according to institutional framings. Other
technologies allow visitors to use their own electronic devices such as cell
phones to interact on a more individual basis with displays, creating what
Kevin Walker40 calls “personalized learning trails” on their trajectory
through the museum. Although this type of interactivity is still largely at the
stage of research,41 some museums (such as the Centre George Pompidou
in Paris, with its “signed viewings”) and independent Web-based initiatives
have put it into practice. hese technologies can, in addition, be used to
bring historical and cultural knowledge beyond the walls of the museum as
institution and into public space.42 For instance, when visiting the city of
Łódź in the summer of 2010, I noticed signs with QR codes attached to many
of the city’s points of historical interest. Visitors with smartphones could
scan these images and receive more information about the points where they
were standing, thus bringing a museum-like method of presentation into
public and virtual space.
Paul Williams’43 description of “memorial museums”—which he deines
as museums commemorating some kind of historical mass sufering, and
which he identiies as having risen in prominence in the last few decades—
can perhaps be applied in part to describe the museological correlates of a
broader collapse of grand narratives associated with postmodernity. I thus
quote at length his description:
Whereas earlier monuments tended to follow classical, religious, and
native-landscape-related themes, linking soldiers’ sacriices to national
identity and thus valorizing them, these new types of memorials tend to be
characterized by minimalist and abstract design over that which is grandiose
and authoritative; decentered and incommodious space over that which is
central and iconic; bodily visitor experiences that are sensory and emotional
40
Walker, Kevin, “Structuring Visitor Participation,” in Loïc Tallon and Kevin Walker, eds.
Digital Technologies and the Museum Experience: Handheld Guides and Other Media, Lanham,
MD: AltaMiraPress, 2008, p. 109.
41
E.g, Tallon, Loïc, and Kevin Walker, eds., Digital Technologies and the Museum Experience:
Handheld Guides and Other Media, Lanham, MD: AltaMira Press, 2008.
42
However, at least in the case of “traditional” museums (in the sense of institutions with
permanent exhibition space), information remains tied to a central location.
Williams, Paul, Memorial Museums: he Global Rush to Commemorate Atrocities. New
York: Berg, 2007.
43
102
The “New Museum” in Poland
rather than visual and impassive; [and] interpretive strategies that utilize
private, subjective testimony over oicial historical narratives.44
Many newer museums have an experiential and personal orientation,
relying on visitors’ sensory and emotional identiication with people and
places described for their efect. his orientation is arguably linked to global
cultural trends stressing the importance of the individual and the primacy
of experience.45 his is accomplished through the use of often elaborately
reconstructed immersive environments—through which the visitor is
encouraged to identify with those who lived through a particular time period
or historical event—and, in history museums in particular, the display of
individual lives (e.g., personal testimonies and biographies, photos of
people) rather than larger-than-life heroic igures. New and innovative forms
of visitor participation46 also work to increase visitors’ sense of individual
agency vis-à-vis museum displays.
“In situ” museums—those that place the visitor into an experiential
“virtual world”—are nothing new,47 but new technologies open a range of
new multisensory possibilities for these types of displays, such as the use
of audiovisual media (historic radio or television broadcasts, eyewitness
footage, and digital reconstructions). hese often go beyond reconstructing
historical environments into the realm of the hyperreal,48 providing multiperspectival, larger-than-life experiences.49 As Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett
writes: “tourists travel to actual destinations to experience virtual places”—
historically and culturally important sites are typically not presented to
44
Ibid., p. 3.
Giddens, Anthony, Modernity and Self-Identity: Self and Society in the Late Modern Age,
Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1991; Harvey, David, he Condition of Postmodernity:
An Enquiry into the Origins of Cultural Change, Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1989; Zengotita,
homas de, Mediated: How the Media Shapes Your World and the Way You Live In It, New York:
Bloomsbury, 2005.
45
46
Visitor participation can take a variety of forms, ranging from, among others, looking
at exhibits and forming one’s own interpretation (as in traditional museums); to volunteer
work and contributing artifacts, personal stories, etc. to the museum; to displays that allow
the visitor to actually alter the display or participate in the performance (for instance, some of
the events organized by the Lublin-based Teatr NN); to newer, technologically enabled forms
of more active participation (Tallon and Walker 2008).
47
Kirshenblatt-Gimblett 1998, pp. 3-4.
Baudrillard, Jean, Simulacra and simulation, trans. S. Faria Glaser, Ann Arbor: University
of Michigan Press, 1994.
48
49
I experienced one example recently while visiting the Warsaw Rising Museum in
November 2011. here, I had the chance to view the ilm “Miasto Ruin” (“City of Ruins”), a
three-dimensional digital reconstruction of the destroyed city of Warsaw after World War II,
shown from the perspective of a plane lying over the city.
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Erica Fontana
visitors in their original form, but are enhanced by means of descriptions,
virtual reconstructions, and other information and presentations designed
speciically for visitors.50 However, given this pattern of unprecedented
access to a variety of information and experience, questions must be raised
as to how visitors’ perceptions of historical events and cultural phenomena
are being afected.51
he “new museum” in the sense of contemporary, multimediated,
experiential, and often entertainment-oriented forms of presentation—
ofering new experiences to the visitor—must therefore be distinguished from
ideologically “new” museums in the sense of institutions that embody new,
critical, and democratic ideas52 and thus challenges to museum narratives,
although there is certainly potential for the two to overlap.
New Museum in Poland
Within Poland speciically, the question of the “new” museum and its
characteristics is also set against the backdrop of the aforementioned
debates over national identity and the politics of history. While national
narratives remain important in Polish museums, particularly in light of the
“new historical policy” described above, other social and cultural forces and
trends work toward the universalization of memory and the language in
which it is discussed. his is also related to the “mediatization” of memory—
phenomena in which mass media forms, which are often circulated within
the nation and globally, represent and shape historical consciousness.53
In my research, I have come across several well-advertised and
technologically state-of-the-art historical and cultural museums that are
either in development or have recently been opened in Poland. Among many
others, these include the Warsaw Uprising Museum, the Polish History
Museum, and the Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw; and the
Museum of the Second World War in Gdańsk. his phenomenon raises the
question, irst of all, of why now. What factors in the contemporary local,
national, and transnational context and in recent history have prompted the
development of so many new museums? he second question raised is what
kinds of narratives these museums are putting forth. he new technological
forms of many of these museums have been well-advertised. However, are the
104
50
Kirshenblatt-Gimblett 1998, p. 9.
51
Baudrillard 1994; Zengotita 2005; Żychlińska 2009.
52
Piotrowski 2011.
53
Korzeniewski 2010.
The “New Museum” in Poland
stories they are telling also new? If so, on what resources are they drawing to
create and promote new, or at least less well-known, narratives?
As my research thus far has focused primarily on the public dimensions
of museum narratives, with interviews in the initial stages for the time being,
I cannot yet ofer any conclusions with regard to individual interpretations.
However, regarding public and large-scale dimensions of the position of the
museum in Poland, I ofer two preliminary hypotheses. First, I posit that
part of the reason for the presence of so many new museums is a need for
commemorative “rituals” creating and reinforcing (new as well as old) images
of Polish identity in a time of contestation and “identity crisis”—in Polish
national identity on one hand, but also with regard to museological and
commemorative forms and practices54. Secondly, with regard to the idea of
the “new museum,” I suggest that the forms of many contemporary museum
displays are strongly relective of new technological, experiential, and
globally relevant models of the museum. With regard to museum content,
while dominant, and traditional, national mythologies remain an important
source of meaning within museums, alternative sources of meaning are being
drawn not only from explicitly national mythologies, but from local sources
on one hand and transnational sources on the other.
New Museum in Poland: Case Studies
he institutions I examine below are only three of the many new museums
representative of the phenomena I discuss above, and do not cover the entire
scope of my research. In the interest of space, I have chosen to discuss these
three on a comparative basis because all three are in the same city (Warsaw),
all have been characterized as “narrative museums”—that is, museums that
are driven less by the collections of material objects (of which there may be
very few, or none) than by an overarching story being told—and all have
either been opened in the last decade or are still in development. As, again,
the research remains in the preliminary stages, the current study is limited
primarily to an assessment of the public narratives put forth by the museum.
Ongoing and future research will include, among other considerations, a
more extensive exploration of the institutional background and political
history of each museum, brief surveys of museum workers, volunteers,
and possibly visitors, and more in-depth discussions with museum workers
and volunteers. Factors I consider here include the museum’s oicial or
Turner, Victor, From Ritual to heatre: he Human Seriousness of Play. Cambridge, Mass.:
Performing Arts Journal Publications, 1982.
54
105
Erica Fontana
public narrative (as described in promotional material or discussions with
museum personnel acting in an oicial capacity); the physical display and
presentation of museum materials; the role of critical relexivity toward
historical narratives; and opportunities for critique or participation by the
museum’s public(s).
he Museum of Polish History
he Museum of Polish History (Museum Historii Polski; henceforth referred
to as MPH) is a museum intended to encompass within its scope Polish
history since the tenth century—including, according to a brochure available
in the museum oice, “the history of the gentry republic, the Solidarity
movement and both restorations of independent Poland.” According to
this same brochure, the emphasis is on “the most signiicant themes in the
history of Poland—state and nation—with special emphasis on the idea of
freedom…and on the struggle for independence.”
he MPH was established by the Ministry for Culture and National
Heritage in 2006. As of the writing of this article, no permanent exhibit
space had yet been built for the MPH. hree major temporary exhibits have
taken place, along with a number of international cooperative projects,
publications, and other projects and exhibitions (e.g., street displays).
he irst, “Roads to Independence” in 2008, commemorated Poland’s 90th
anniversary of independence, telling the story of Polish history from the
partitions of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth to the re-establishment
of the Polish state in 1918 and the March 1921 national constitution. “Roads
to Independence” included an exhibit catalog published by the museum,
a board exhibition realized by the Ministry of Foreign Afairs, and an
Internet exhibit (http://www.niepodleglosc.muzhp.pl/) featuring many of
the same photos and textual elements in the book. he narrative of “Roads
to Independence” is a fairly traditional one, with much of the text drawn
primarily from government documents and the writings of culturally and
historically important igures. he exhibit’s photos depict mostly historically
important igures, maps (especially those depicting Poland’s borders and
the changes thereof), battles, and representative scenes of everyday life and
war. he emphasis is on imposition by foreign powers and the survival of the
Polish nation despite this. A historical narrative at the level of the nation is
fore grounded, rather than an emphasis on individual voices or speciic local
experiences are discussed.55
Muzeum Historii Polski, Drogi do Niepodległości (catalogue), Warsaw: Muzeum Historii
Polski, 2008.
55
106
The “New Museum” in Poland
he second major exhibition by the MPH, “Between the Wars: he
Faces of Modernity,” was held in 2008 and 2009 (having opened on
Independence Day, November 11, 2008) in the Royal Palace in Warsaw. his
elaborate, multi-mediated exhibit—featuring such technologies as sound
recordings and holograms to “harmonically join tradition and modernity,”
as discussed by the exhibit catalog56—dealt with the theme of “modernity”
and its challenges and promises in the newly independent state of inter-war
Poland (1918–1937), from both a cultural perspective and that of everyday
life broadly, as well as to a lesser extent political themes (e.g., diplomacy).
One notable feature of this exhibit was its focus on life apart from strictly
military or political history, representing an implicit attempt to address a
lack in predominant national historical narratives and museography and, in
its focus on everyday life and individuals, a turn toward the “individualizing”
museological trends described above.57
Most recently, the MPH presented the “Separated by War” exhibit,
dealing with the diversely realized yet well-known phenomenon of wartime
separation of families in Poland and nearby areas during the occupations,
border changes, and population transfers of the 20th century. he exhibit
focuses on individual stories and makes an efort to tell not just stories it
considers “representative” or only those of “typical” ethnic Poles, but to
present the diversity of wartime experiences of those living in the present-day
territory of Poland: children separated from parents, individuals deported
to Siberia, a story of a Jewish girl hidden during the war in a Catholic
orphanage, and—in a previously less well-described historical experience—
forced conscription into the Wehrmacht.58
he exhibit brochure59 explicitly critiques national “martyrology,” a
common theme, as discussed above, in much of Polish historiography. It
ofers as a corrective “civilian martyrology”—the experience of sufering
by everyday citizens. here is thus a critique of national-level historical
narratives; the implication is that the dominant narratives are not necessarily
incorrect, but are incomplete. To “balance” national memory, it is necessary
not to simply change or reframe familiar national stories, but to broaden the
stories by remembering the experiences of civilians as well as soldiers and
oicials.
56
Muzeum Historii Polski, Dwudziestolecie. Oblicza nowoczesności 1918–1937(catalogue),
Warsaw: Muzeum Historii Polski, 2008, p. 6.
57
Muzeum Historii Polski, Dwudziestolecie.
Muzeum Historii Polski, Wojennie rozstania (catalogue), Warsaw: Muzeum Historii
Polski, 2009.
58
59
Ibid., p. 9.
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Erica Fontana
A related and ongoing (since 2007) project, “Families Separated by
History,” elicits stories from the public in Poland and internationally
(particularly England and the US) about their experiences from 1939 to 1989,
and during World War II particularly, in an efort to exhibit a diverse range
of experiences. he experience of the individual and his or her family—local,
speciic stories—is paramount in this project. As the project’s Web site and
the text of a handout distributed by the museum state, “Every account and
story is invaluable, as there are no two identical family stories. All of them
deserve to be recorded, because they testify to the vastness of experiences
and complexities of Polish life in the 20th century.”60
he inluence of international and global factors, however, is also
apparent in the museum’s activities. he methods and museography—the
media of presentation—are contemporary and appear designed to appeal
to the interests of both Polish and international audiences. Particularly in
the two later exhibits, the focus on everyday life and stories of wartime
sufering—individual, human experiences rather than speciically national
ones—also indicate inluences of the “universalization” of memory described
by Korzeniewski (2010).61 International collaborative activities have also
taken place, with exhibits being held at the Imperial War Museum in London
and the Parc du Cinquantenaire in Brussels.
Warsaw Uprising Museum
Unlike the other two museums discussed here, the Warsaw Uprising Museum
deals with a speciic event rather than a more broadly deined cultural or
national population. he museum was founded in 1983, but did not open
until July 31, 2004—the 60th anniversary of the Uprising. he museum’s
main aim seems to be to present and commemorate an event that was, and
remains, important for Polish history and patriotism, but to update the
media of presentation for a new generation. While the conceptual space
for visitors’ interpretations of the museum’s exhibits appears to be the
most clearly circumscribed by oicial narratives, the museum also acts as
a sort of cultural center, presenting a variety of educational, cultural, and
entertainment events related to Warsaw’s history, culture, and city space.
Muzeum Historii Polski, “Families Separted by War,” 2008, Accessed 19 December 2011
from < http://www.rodziny.muzhp.pl/?jezyk=eng> .
60
61
108
Ibid.
The “New Museum” in Poland
he museum is organized chronologically and thematically; as one follows
the visitor path, one can collect “calendar pages” describing the events of
each day leading up to and during the Uprising. he presentation is strongly
experiential, evoking life in occupied Warsaw through the use of an often
overwhelming array of original and reproduced artifacts and documents,
reconstructed spatial environments, ilms, sound recordings, and digital
reconstructions. he museum contains a research library, reading room,
and archive; however, the average visitor is meant not necessarily to engage
in a critical assessment of history, but primarily to identify with Warsaw
Uprising participants’ lives and the reasons for their actions. As our Englishspeaking tour guide explained when I visited the museum in November 2011
with a group of Polish and international researchers, the Warsaw Uprising
is commemorated as a “moral victory” for Poland despite the destruction
and loss of lives during and after the event—at least in particular narratives
of history, including that posited by the museum. he orientation toward
visitors identifying with Warsaw Uprising participants is perhaps best
exempliied by the children’s area, the “Hall of the Little Insurgent” (Sala
Małego Powstańca), whose name itself immediately interpellates the young
visitor into its particular narrative. A reproduction of the well-known “Little
Insurgent” statue greets the visitor upon walking into the hall. Children can
make art projects related to the museum’s themes, or send “postcards,” and a
video playing on the TV screen features children dressed in military uniforms
and conversing with soldiers, historians, and reenactors.
he Warsaw Uprising Museum begins with a central, uniting event, which
itself is taken for granted in terms of both facts and signiicance, and from the
“imagined community” 62of people commemorating and identifying with it as
part of a historical narrative of Polish morality and national pride, develops a
center of experiential historical and cultural learning. Although experiential
participation is an important feature of the museum, visitor contribution
to museum content and space for interpretation are rather circumscribed,
partly due to the nature of the museum as commemorating a historical event
in a particular time and place. However, an ongoing oral history project by the
museum team, featured on the Web site, collects interviews and biographical
information from Warsaw Uprising participants. Web site visitors can also
add biographical information about participants to an online biography list.
here is thus a possibility, albeit within a very deined frame, for interested
parties to contribute to museum content.
Anderson, Benedict Richard O’Gorman, Imagined Communities: Relections on the Origin
and Spread of Nationalism, 2nd ed. New York: Verso, 1991.
62
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Erica Fontana
he Museum of the History of the Polish Jews
he Museum of the History of the Polish Jews, founded by a nongovernmental initiative in 1999, represents a fairly explicit recognition of,
and attempt to address, particular lacks in dominant national narratives,
namely the understanding of Polish Jews within Polish history primarily as
victims of the Holocaust. Instead, it strives to present not only this time
period, but the diverse, approximately 1000-year history of Jews and Jewish
life in Poland. A feature of the museum narrative is its focus on presenting in
its core exhibition the words, images, and stories of Polish Jews throughout
history, in part to showcase diversity and counteract monolithic images of
Polish Jewish history. his presentation technique also relects the focus
on everyday life and individual stories described above and the orientation
toward narrative and meaning rather than, and in addition to, objects.
he museum will include primarily these kinds of intangible objects, as
relevant artifacts are held not by the museum itself, but by the Association
of the Jewish Historical Institute of Poland, one of the museum’s founding
organizations.
Of the three narrative museums discussed here, this museum’s narrative
seems to be among the most open to public contributions to the story being
told. his is likely in part a response to the lack of previous historical explication
in widespread public narratives. he protagonists of the museum’s narrative
are mostly absent, and the 20th century has seen attempts by totalitarian
regimes to forget or erase their history. hus a variety of available methods and
sources, in the frames of several diferent sub-projects under the museum’s
jurisdiction, are drawn on. he physical museum itself is as of the time of
this writing in development, being built in Warsaw next to the Monument
to the Ghetto Heroes and scheduled to open in 2013. he Virtual Shtetl, a
Web portal, ofers researchers, those with Polish Jewish heritage, and other
interested people the opportunity to contribute information—photographs,
stories, individual names and biographies, and other data—about Jewish
villages in Poland’s history. hus contributions related to speciic local
histories are solicited, in part to showcase the diversity of experiences and
address the deiciencies of monolithic historical narratives. A third project
involves the reconstruction, using traditional construction and painting
techniques and drawing on archival material such as photos and building
plans, of the roof of a wooden synagogue from Gwoździec in present-day
western Ukraine, to be displayed in the museum when it opens—a new
physical object, but representing historical techniques, places, and meanings.
International organizations (such as Handshouse Studios in the US) and
volunteers from various countries are helping to realize the reconstruction.
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The “New Museum” in Poland
Finally, the museum is associated with “he Polish Righteous—Recalling
Forgotten History” project, which is dedicated to people who rescued Jews
during World War II.
he museum’s set of projects is ambitious and multi-faceted. It remains
to be seen what kinds of narratives the deliberate absence of an imposed
narrative—i.e., allowing the “voices” of Polish Jews throughout history to
speak—will leave space for. It will also be interesting to note how these voices
will in fact be heard in a present characterized by competing and overlapping
forces compelling historiography and its public presentation at once toward
local, national, and transnational directions.
Conclusions
Based on my admittedly limited research thus far, it appears that new
Polish historical and cultural museums encompass attempts to bring the
past into the present in several ways—re-presenting and “re-ritualizing”
existing historical narratives, as well as addressing the shortcomings of
these narratives from the perspective of the present cultural, social, and
historical climate. A society’s imaginations of its own past, in the form of
history as presented in public, relect current conditions and values; the past
is kept alive in, and framed by, present interests.63 As such, trends in recent
Polish museography relect the multi-directional and complex inluences on
attitudes toward history.
In keeping with the idea of new historical politics, there remains a valuing
of traditional historical narratives, at least in museums, which tend to be
oriented more toward presenting history to the public than toward detailed
critical historiography. To varying degrees, all three museums described above
appear to engage with narratives likely to be familiar to the museum-going
public in Poland—whether in reinforcing such narratives, supplementing
familiar knowledge and perceptions and attempting to address the perceived
shortcomings of existing museum methods, or, most commonly, both. Many
of the exhibits presented by the Museum of Polish History, for example,
deal with familiar historical themes, often presenting them in innovative
ways or seeking new perspectives (e.g., individual, regionally representative
life stories) from which to present historical events. he Warsaw Uprising
63
Assmann, Jan, Pamięć kulturowa. Pismo, zapamiętywanie i polityczna tożsamość w cywilizacjach starożytnych, Robert Traba, introduction and editor; trans. A. Kryczyńska-Pham,
Wydawnictwa Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego, Warsaw, 2008; Halbwachs, Maurice, On Collective
Memory, translated and edited by L. A. Coser, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992
[1950].
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Erica Fontana
Museum is based around a familiar historical event considered important
in Polish national history and presents it to visitors through contemporary
technology in a highly experiential manner. In doing so, the museum engages
a public of museum-goers who identify with this history, and also presents
an opportunity for ongoing engagement through cultural and educational
events. he Museum of the History of the Polish Jews will attempt to draw
on various sources of knowledge to craft a more detailed and diverse public
narrative of Polish Jewish history than those that are currently well-known.
However, there has also been a recognition of both international
museographical trends as Polish museums seek international audiences
and partnerships and as “universal” media and ways of talking about
memory become more present.64 he inluences of the idea of the global,
contemporary “new museum,” characterized by high-tech presentation and
an individual and experiential orientation, are evident in the forms of all
three museums described herein. Engagement with international visitors
and collaborators—both virtually, for example, through the presence of
interactive multi-lingual Web sites (ofered by all three museums) and online
projects such as the Virtual Shtetl, and in-person, for example, the Museum
of Polish History’s international exhibits and the engagement of volunteers
from around the world in the Gwoździec synagogue reconstruction project—
additionally situates these museums in a context of international dialogue
about memory, history, and the practices thereof.
With regard to museum content, the rise of local and speciic stories and
images, and visitor and volunteer participation in a diverse array of forms,
are related both to attempts to critique and address monolithic concepts of
history and, I would hypothesize, to a turn toward individuality and sensory
experience in global discourses of memory. his phenomenon of emphasizing
local, speciic, and/or individual stories, evident to some degree in all three
museums, points to a shift in both form and content with regard to museum
practice and display.
he “New Museum” in Poland
Erica Fontana
Abstract
he past few years in Poland and, indeed, globally, have seen a shift from the
predominance of traditional museums to the rise of multi-mediated, multi-sensory,
64
112
Korzeniewski 2010.
The “New Museum” in Poland
and interactive “new” museums. However, in the midst of technological shifts in
museum forms as well as broader social, cultural, and political changes, are the
images of Poland and Polish culture and national identity, as presented in museums,
also changing? If so, how, and what resources are being drawn on to construct new
identities and/or reproduce old ones?
I am currently engaged in a study of museums—conceptualized broadly to
include traditional historical and cultural museums, cultural and historical centers,
and online archives and virtual “memory sites—in contemporary Poland. My study
focuses on one particular type of museum “publics”—those most involved with and
interested in the museum process, the workers and volunteers. I am interested in
which individuals comprise this form of the museum public in the case of historical
and cultural museums in Poland, their motivations for becoming involved, and
their role within museum practices more broadly. I hypothesize, irst, that new
museums understood as a sort of public “ritual” represent in part a means of
addressing uncertainty over national identity; and secondly, that local/regional and
transnational resources, in addition to national ones are increasingly being drawn
on in both museum form and content in the process of constructing new public
images of Poland, in part in dialogue with broader and more difuse audiences, but
also that these new images coexist, at times uneasily, with familiar discourses of the
nation.
K e y w o r d s : museums, commemoration, memory studies, technology, national
identity, Poland, Warsaw.
113