Museum Studies & Museology : 1000 Objects: Extra-Ordinary Everyday Things (Klotz)

1000 Objects: Extra-Ordinary Everyday Things (Klotz)


Dirt cupcake mix, as American as apple pie. Nipple lightener from Japan. Tick juice, indispensable in Venezuela for black magic love rituals. Sunglasses from Zimbabwe with shades cut from plastic juice bottles and no lenses. Korean disposable straw sandals made especially for mourners and corpses. Is this stuff cool or what? But wait--there s more. Flip through this book in search of international weirdness, and it s a pretty sure bet you ll wind up absorbing some sobering information about sex, death, destruction, poverty, and the arrogant ways of multinationals. Under the guise of an ultrahip consumer s guide to the world s nifty stuff--divided into sections labeled Food, Fashion, Animals, Body, Soul and Leisure--1000 Extra/Ordinary Objects is a subversive crusader for human rights and ecological awareness. Sure, you can find out how to buy your very own Dom Perignon-flavored sorbet or a CD of Music for Healthy Pets. But you ll also stumble upon objects like the cute little bright green Russian-made PFM-1 antipersonnel mine, a favorite toy of generations of Afghan children punished for their curiosity by a double whammy of liquid explosive and tiny blades. On other pages, seemingly innocuous objects--like the sweetly lumpy doll couples made of tree bark by Elliot Chitungu of Zimbabwe--turn out to have a bitter subtext. (Chitungu, who is gay, makes all his couples heterosexual, in his country, homosexuality is a criminal offense.) Other objects are examples of savvy recycling, like the paper made in Malawi from elephant dung and recycled cardboard. With straightforward descriptions in both English and French, unblinking photographs of young people modeling even the most outré objects, and a Yellow Pages that includes information about little-known charitable organizations worldwide, this is a fun book with a heart of gold. --Cathy Curtis

Prima Schmoeker - Das Buch aus dem kleinen, aber feinen Taschen-Verlag kam mir rein zufaellig in die Finger und ich konnte nicht mehr davon lassen. Mit einer gehoerigen Portion Witz und Sarkasmus gewuerzt wird der Leser ueber die Existenz einer grossen Reihe an kuriosen Gegenstaenden, deren Geschichte, Handhabung und Nutzen informiert. Auch die kritische Betrachtung von z.B. als Schmetterlingen getarnten, russischen Anti-Personen-Minen wird nicht vernachlaessigt.Wussten Sie z.B. schon, dass es Schlafsaecke gibt, die auf Faust-Groesse zusammen gerollt werden koennen oder es 1995 ein staatlich verordnetes Murmel-Spielverbot im Irak gab ? Nein ? Dann sollten Sie dieses Buch mal in die Hand nehmen !




1000 Objects: Extra-Ordinary Everyday Things (Klotz)