Skip to main content

Distributed for UCL Press

Deconstituting Museums

Participation’s Affective Work

Examines the core reasons that museums struggle to be more participatory. 

In recent years, museums have turned to encouraging visitor participation in hopes of becoming more inclusive, accessible, and diverse. Despite these efforts, significant gaps between the politics of museum administration and those of participatory practice have often led to disappointment and anger. According to Helen Graham, while museums embody a logic of representational liberalism whereby museum professionals make decisions on behalf of “future generations” and “the public,” participation pulls from direct and horizontal political traditions. In light of this problem, Deconstituting Museums develops critical and creative interventions in implementing museum participation, envisioning how the affective component of participatory practice could enable new possibilities in both museum practice and political ontology. 

200 pages | 6.14 x 9.21 | © 2025

Anthropology: Cultural and Social Anthropology

Archaeology


UCL Press image

View all books from UCL Press

Table of Contents

Contents
Acknowledgements

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Part I: Museum constitution
1 Museum constitution, critically
2 Museum constitution, affectively International museology I: ICOM museum definition

Part II: Detaching
3 Detaching, affectively
4 Detaching, speculatively

Part III: Participatory worlding
International museology II: participatory museology, participatory research and action research
5 Participatory worlding
6 Modulating
7 Organising
International museology III: ecomuseums – can ‘museum’ be deconstituted?

Conclusions

Appendix
References
Index

Be the first to know

Get the latest updates on new releases, special offers, and media highlights when you subscribe to our email lists!

Sign up here for updates about the Press