Goette, Susan Ann2010-02-232010-02-232009-12https://hdl.handle.net/11299/58345University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. December 2009. Major: Anthropology. Advisors: Timothy Dunnigan and Kathleen Barlow. 1 computer file (PDF); vi, 343 pages, appendices A-G. Ill. (plan).Visions of the People was a complex and influential exhibit focusing on American Indians peoples. This study examines the role of museums as cultural interpreters, explores the social nature of objects as markers of cultural ideas and values, analyzes the ways in which particular representations achieve their authority, assesses object selection processes with attention to patterns of inclusion as well as exclusion, and investigates the cultural narratives employed by museum workers as they conceptualized and created the exhibit. This work explores the understanding, meaning, and representation of American Indian art, history, and culture that was fashioned by the museum (MIA). The import of this case study rests on the assertion that images are powerful. Museums display objects and images in an attempt to convey particular ideas and interpretations to an audience. This study has the potential to serve as a primer for those interested in museums as historically situated institutions that possess the cultural authority to reproduce and interpret the stories we tell about ourselves to ourselves, as well as the stories we tell about others (C.Geertz). Each section of this study addresses a different topic, and brings together the perspectives of those people most concerned with or most impacted by each topic. Contributors to each section include: scholars, museum professionals, artists, and members of the audience. Each of these roles included both American Indian and non-Indian contributors.en-USAmerican IndianArtCultural NarrativesFry BreadMuseum ExhibitsRepresentationAnthropologyAccessioning visions of the people.Thesis or Dissertation