The team at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology is excited to announce the launch of the MAA Digital Lab: an online platform through which we aim to increase and diversify digital engagement and access to the world cultures collections in the Museum.

In recent years MAA has committed to improving digital accessibility to collections from Asia and across the world through research and documentation projects including the Cambridge Rivers Project and Stores Move, and through the open access Collections Online database. Our research and engagement with audiences, communities, and scholars has prioritised transparency regarding legacies of colonialism, pushing towards greater dialogue, equality and change in our thought and practice, and diversifying the narratives and voices that speak to and about the collections in our care.

The Digital Lab will aim to transform the ways we engage with the collections of world cultures at MAA, and moreover with the histories, stories, and relationships that connect them. We want to try new ways of working with, showing, and talking about the collections: to do things that cannot be done within the physical space of the Museum.

Over the coming years we will be researching, writing, and commissioning new content in the form of blog posts, research notes, digital interventions of all kinds and online exhibitions. In our first few posts, we’re unravelling stories of the tea trade and tea consumption in Russia and China, the archaeology of maize alcohol in South America, and a Chinese deity’s 180 year and 9000 kilometre journey through wars, museums, and mistaken identities. Every output will start with an object in the MAA collections and go as far and wide as the author wishes.
The themes and subjects will be as diverse as the collections in the Museum. To begin with we have identified two research strands that will prompt us to ask different questions and tell different stories. Object Diasporas will trace the journeys by which artefacts have reached Cambridge, from complex local trajectories of production and use to the power relationships of colonial era collecting. Substances of Wellbeing and Intoxication will explore drinks and other substances including tea, coffee, chocolate, and alcohol: the uses people made of them, the social and cultural contexts in which they were consumed, the journeys they took and the interpretations offered by collectors and curators.
As the work of the MAA Digital Lab begins to bring new perspectives and new voices to the global collections in Cambridge, we will continue to highlight the complexities and contradictions in objects and their histories; to challenge the categories and keywords according to which artefacts are catalogued and museumised, and with which we view and live in the world.
We’re always looking for new contributions and ideas, so if you have a story to tell that starts with an object in the MAA collections, we would love to hear from you. Get in touch here.
We hope you will join us on our journey and take part in the conversation.
Author’s bio:
Mark Elliott is the Senior Curator in Anthropology at MAA, responsible for collections from Africa, Asia and Europe. His research interests focus on Asia, particularly south Asia, and histories of museum collections and museum practice.
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