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University of Cambridge Museums
University of Cambridge Museums
49 episodes
4 months ago
Sedgwick Museum Director Liz Hide explores how Darwin's specimens don't just tell us about the development of his geological theories, but also give us a glimpse into nineteenth-century resource extraction and global economic networks.
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Society & Culture
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Sedgwick Museum Director Liz Hide explores how Darwin's specimens don't just tell us about the development of his geological theories, but also give us a glimpse into nineteenth-century resource extraction and global economic networks.
Show more...
Society & Culture
Episodes (20/49)
University of Cambridge Museums
Darwin's Chalcopyrite
Sedgwick Museum Director Liz Hide explores how Darwin's specimens don't just tell us about the development of his geological theories, but also give us a glimpse into nineteenth-century resource extraction and global economic networks.
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1 year ago
3 minutes 29 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
Everest at 70 - The geology of the summit of Everest
Hear about the geology of the summit of Everest
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2 years ago
3 minutes 31 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
Everest at 70 - A rock from the roof of the world
Here how the first ever rock specimen collected from the summit of Mount Everest ended up at the Sedgwick Museum
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2 years ago
2 minutes 43 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
This Globe is Broken
‘This Globe is Broken’. A poem about how the globe as an object is not neutral. A response to the colonial 1875 Jigsaw Globe on display in the Museum’s Globe Gallery. Creator: Annie Tomkins. This audio was created as part of Museum Remix 2023, coinciding with the University of Cambridge Museums’ programme of Power and Memory.
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2 years ago
50 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
Unearthing Anning and her Ichthyosaur
Credits: Written by Annabel Worth, Kirsten Huffer and Emma Pratt Read by Kirsten and Annabel Audio editing and soundscape by Emma This piece concerns Mary Anning's Icthyosaur in the Sedgwick museum. Once upon a time, 200 million years ago, dolphin-like marine reptiles, or ichthyosaurs, like this one roamed the Jurassic Sea. About 200 years ago, Mary Anning, mother of paleontology, found this ichthyosaur fossil along the craggy cliffs of England's southern coast. If fossils could talk, what would this ichthyosaur say? What could it tell us about the experiences of its collector, Mary Anning, who was widely excluded from scientific circles of her day? And what could it tell us about Adam Sedgwick, who purchased it—possibly with the money that he gained from the labour of enslaved people? What stories of power and memory, gender and colonialism, could this ichthyosaur bring to life?
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2 years ago
4 minutes 31 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
Heads Of...
This audio was created as part of Museum Remix 2023, coinciding with the University of Cambridge Museums’ programme of Power and Memory. It was put together by Kiki Bordean, Heidi McEvoy-Swift and Katrina Dring with the help of the Museum Remix and wider UCM teams. The Museum of Classical Archaeology is filled with sculptural expressions of the human form, including many heads. In one corner of the gallery, nestled among a display of busts, are two heads with ragged, broken edges around the neck. These came from bronze sculptures of Roman emperors Augustus and Claudius; the sculptures having been decapitated as a symbol of resistance during local uprisings by the Kushite and Iceni, respectively. Nearby in the gallery is another instance of decapitation, this time carried out by the Roman Empire. The scene from Trajan’s column shows the severed heads of two Dacians being presented to Trajan on the battlefield; a symbol of Rome’s enduring power and expanding empire. Rather than re-tell or verbally extend the information already given in the captions about these heads, we decided to complement it with a (hopefully!) thought-provoking collection of sounds. In the soundscape, we wanted to explore the circumstances of these heads – what they symbolise(d), how they came to be detached from their bodies, and how their stories both overlap and diverge. The wolf played an important role in Celtic, Dacian and Roman mythologies and, even today, is often seen as symbolic of wildness and freedom. We invite the listener to reflect on the themes of identity, power, and expression which we ourselves were occupied by during the two-day programme. Featuring the voices of Kiki Bordean, Heidi McEvoy-Swift, Katrina Dring, Ruchika Gurung and Barney Brown.
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2 years ago
1 minute 23 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
A gift of guilt?
Credits: Written by Annabel Worth and Kirsten Huffer Read by Annabel Audio editing by Emma Pratt This piece concerns the Iguanodon fossil cast in the Sedgwick museum. "For us this was a really important story to tell, as it highlights how the university has benefited, and continues to benefit, from slavery and colonialism, in a way that is usually hidden. One can appreciate the object itself, marvel at its great size, thinking how amazing it is that something like this ever existed, and be excited about all it has taught us about dinosaur biomechanics and movement, but we believe it is necessary to recognise its history, as well as past wrongdoing by the university and others. Despite the obvious benefits of having such a wonderful cast in our possession, both in terms of academic study and inspiring and exciting the public, this piece’s origins are complex and dark. As you will hear, the dinosaur could be considered part of Leopold II’s attempt to encourage his European neighbours to overlook the suffering being inflicted on the people of the Congo at the end of the 19th century - something which deserves to be acknowledged."
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2 years ago
1 minute 45 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
Heads
This audio was created as part of Museum Remix 2023, coinciding with the University of Cambridge Museums’ programme of Power and Memory. It was put together by Kiki Bordean, Heidi McEvoy-Swift and Katrina Dring with the help of the Museum Remix and wider UCM teams. The Museum of Classical Archaeology is filled with sculptural expressions of the human form, including many heads. In a small case near the entrance are four broken terracotta figurines from Naukratis, a Greek trading post in Egypt. These figurines have been suggested as having features which might indicate individuals of African heritage – features which are not often seen in other sculptures from the classical period. Who were they? The figurines were made from a mould so presumably lots of these figures were made. By whom? For what purpose? Sadly, we don’t know much more. Rather than re-tell or verbally extend the information already given in the captions about these figurines, we decided to complement it with a (hopefully!) thought-provoking collection of sounds. In the soundscape, we wanted to explore the circumstances of these heads – what they symbolise(d), how they were made, used and broken, and what they might tell us about Greek life in Egypt. We invite the listener to reflect on the themes of identity, power, and expression which we ourselves were occupied by during the two-day programme. Featuring the voices of Kiki Bordean, Heidi McEvoy-Swift, Katrina Dring, Ruchika Gurung and Barney Brown.
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2 years ago
1 minute 27 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
The Museum is Not Neutral
The Museum as an institution is not neutral. A response to the colonial 1875 Jigsaw Globe on display in the Museum’s Globe Gallery. Creators: Fu Ge Yang, Sally Yan and Annie Tomkins. This audio was created as part of Museum Remix 2023, coinciding with the University of Cambridge Museums’ programme of Power and Memory.
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2 years ago
2 minutes 55 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
Barra Journal: Audio
Barra Journal: Audio by University of Cambridge Museums
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3 years ago
5 minutes 33 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
Surtsey Journal: Audio
Surtsey Journal: Audio by University of Cambridge Museums
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3 years ago
5 minutes 3 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
Wrestle through a muscular history
In the Museum of Classical Archaeology's Cast Gallery two wrestlers are locked together in eternal combat... and an eternal embrace. Colin Clews untangles the queer resonances of one of classical antiquity's most famous sculptures in this extract from his Bridging Binaries tour. Part of the University of Cambridge Museums' Bridging Binaries LGBTQ+ tour programme.
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4 years ago
2 minutes 57 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
Beware the jaws of Big Mamma!
Klara Widrig explores how received wisdom about gender even impacts on how scientists interpret Tyrannosaurus Rex fossils. Sit back and enjoy this extract from Klara's Bridging Binaries tour of the Sedgwick Museum of Earth Scientists but... beware the jaws of Big Mamma! Part of the University of Cambridge Museums' Bridging Binaries LGBTQ+ tour programme.
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4 years ago
2 minutes 44 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
Sexual speculation over a speckled specimen
A penguin egg in the Polar Museum is more than it seems... Join Julia Peck for a tale of sexual speculation in this Bridging Binaries tour extract. Part of the University of Cambridge Museums' Bridging Binaries LGBTQ+ tour programme.
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4 years ago
3 minutes 3 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
Monks, matrimony and martial arts
Ellen Purdy tells a story of monks, matrimony and martial arts, inspired by a Noh mask in the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. Part of the University of Cambridge Museums' Bridging Binaries LGBTQ+ tour programme.
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4 years ago
2 minutes 53 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
Open the doors on a medical romance
Behind the doors of a medicine cabinet in the Whipple Museum of the History of Science is a story of romance between two pioneering female doctors... Join Meg Roberts for this extract from her Bridging Binaries tour, part of the University of Cambridge Museums' LGBTQ+ tour programme.
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4 years ago
2 minutes 42 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
The many lovers of a legend
The Greek hero Hercules was famous for his many labours, and his many lovers... Luis Jimenez ushers us into the presence of a legend in this extract from his Bridging Binaries tour of the Museum of Classical Archaeology. Part of the University of Cambridge Museums' Bridging Binaries LGBTQ+ tour programme.
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4 years ago
3 minutes 19 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
The interior life of a quiet painter
Glimpse the interior life of artist Gwen John in this extract from Oliver Warren's Bridging Binaries tour of the Fitzwilliam Museum. Part of the University of Cambridge Museums' Bridging Binaries LGBTQ+ tour programme.
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4 years ago
3 minutes 35 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
Join the revelry
Join the revels of the ancient god Dionysus... Lucian Stephenson shares a story from the Museum of Classical Archaeology, part of the University of Cambridge Museums' LGBTQ+ tour programme.
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4 years ago
2 minutes 30 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
What didn't Darwin see?
In the Whipple Museum of the History of Science is a very special microscope... Meg Roberts explores what Charles Darwin did and didn't see in this story from the University of Cambridge Museums' Bridging Binaries tour programme.
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4 years ago
2 minutes 56 seconds

University of Cambridge Museums
Sedgwick Museum Director Liz Hide explores how Darwin's specimens don't just tell us about the development of his geological theories, but also give us a glimpse into nineteenth-century resource extraction and global economic networks.