Reparative Museology and Its Limits
| Authors | |
|---|---|
| Publication date | 12-2025 |
| Journal | Social Text |
| Volume | Issue number | 43 | 4 |
| Pages (from-to) | 33-57 |
| Organisations |
|
| Abstract |
In recent years the notion of repair has taken center stage in many
artistic projects, curatorial programs, and wider museological
initiatives. This turn to repair encompasses sometimes conflicting
issues and agendas, from object restitution and demands for restorative
justice to well‐being programs and remedial approaches to ecological
harm. This article maps and critiques the turn to repair in the museum
world, examining both the potentials and limitations of this framework
for critical museological thinking and practice. Drawing on a series of
case studies connecting European and North American museums to other
contexts globally, the article highlights how reparative
initiatives — while often framed as transformative — are routinely
constrained by institutional logics that prioritize reform over
meaningful or lasting systemic change. To understand these dynamics, the
article moves from material conceptions of repair through
psychoanalytic notions of the reparative and on to decolonial
mobilizations of repair as a worldmaking project. The article concludes
by theorizing reparative abolition as a new horizon for critical transformative praxis within and beyond museums.
|
| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1215/01642472-11960446 |
| Permalink to this page | |
