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Now I'm one of them. Despite all my academic training and deep knowledge that the past was, and is, never simple, I think the mode of the house museum tour is hard to break (see Linda Norris's excellent "What Makes Historic House Tours So Boring"). I found myself, on my test-tour, slipping into "this painting was painted by a famous and important painter," which of course reflects no critical reflection on what made Thomas Sully a sought-after portraitist in his day or what makes him interesting today...and what the heck counts as
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I think I finally felt the "trap" of the tourguide in Henry James's "The Birthplace." I suddenly have new sympathy for the long-time live-in guide at the Poe House (before it came to the NPS) that told people in a hushed voice, quite incorrectly, that, "This is the doorknob [added in 1920, long after his residency] that Edgar Allen Poe touched." Perhaps she couldn't help herself?
1 comment:
We recently encountered a delightful docent at the Jeremiah Lee mansion in Marblehead, MA -- my true test for skill is when I have a child (or two) in tow and whether or not they are able to catch their imaginations. Our guide was passionate and well-informed, and allowed the visiting 12 year old to share his own knowledge, inciting his own enthusiasm (while I silently cheered).
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