Belongings: Oral History, Objects and an Online Exhibition

Title
Belongings: Oral History, Objects and an Online Exhibition
Publication Date
2009
Author(s)
Wilton, Janis
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
University of Technology Sydney ePress (UTS ePress)
Place of publication
Australia
UNE publication id
une:5266
Abstract
The New South Wales Migration Heritage Centre (MHC) was established in 1998. Since 2003 its physical presence has been located within Sydney's Powerhouse Museum and it has had the strategic brief to record the memories of ageing migrants before their stories are lost. The Centre is, however, a museum without a collection; a heritage authority without heritage sites; a cultural institution whose main presence is in cyberspace. Among its high profile projects is one entitled Objects through time and another Belongings. Both focus on the ways in which objects can convey aspects of the migration experience. Belongings, the focus of this article, presents the remembered experiences of people who migrated to Australia after World War II and seeks to highlight significant features of their experiences through asking them to share their memories and to nominate and talk about significant objects. As a project it grew out of movable heritage policy work within state government agencies, and its initiators – John Petersen, Kylie Winkworth and Meredith Walker – were central players in this development. It was also inspired by the National Quilt Register of the Pioneer Women's Hut at Tumbarumba.
Link
Citation
Public History Review, v.16, p. 1-19
ISSN
1833-4989
1037-9851
Start page
1
End page
19

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