The Emergence of Scientific Collections on Africa in Swiss Ethnographic Museums from 1890. Knowledge and ignorance of the museum as a colonial archive

AutorIn Name
Samuel
Bachmann
Art der Arbeit
Dissertation
Stand
laufend/en cours
DozentIn Name
Prof.
Julia
Tischler
Institution
Departement Geschichte
Ort
Basel
Jahr
2025/2026
Abstract

This study investigates the history of African material heritage in Swiss museum collections. It is mostly interested in the first decades after the foundation of the first cultural history museums in Switzerland from around 1890. With the founding of these institutions, a new understanding of cultural heritage culminated and the transformation of curiosities into scientific research materials came to its conclusion. Simultaneously, the ways in which cultural heritage was preserved, catalogued, researched, or displayed changed fundamentally.

African material heritage and the concomitant scientification of Africa can be found in a great variety of different collecting institutions such as natural or cultural history museums, botanical gardens, libraries, public archives and so forth. The collected materials were scattered over many different institutions although it was not unusual that they were collected simultaneously in the field. However, I have an extensive focus on so-called ethnographic collections compiled in colonial Africa around 1900 and, in line with this, the African heritage collections of different Swiss ethnographic museums were systematically examined.

The research explores the question of the provenance of African material heritage in Swiss ethnographic museums and shows that and how, despite a systematic lack of information, colonial moments of acquisition can be reconstructed. I also show how the scientification of African heritage in museums results in an alienation of its meanings and I prove that the collections and artifacts under investigation are a unique source for researching a specific Swiss colonial history. 

External ID
75617