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Museum

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About 1 pages (264 words)
Museum Summary

institution dedicated to preserving and interpreting the primary tangible evidence of humankind and the environment. In its preserving of this primary evidence, the museum differs markedly from the library, with which it has often been compared, for the items housed in a museum are mainly unique and constitute the raw material of study and research. In the museum the object, in many cases removed in time, place, and circumstance from its original context, communicates itself directly to the viewer in a way not possible through other media. Museums have been founded for a variety of purposes: to serve as recreational facilities, scholarly venues, or educational resources; to contribute to the quality of life of the areas where they are situated; to attract tourism to a region; to promote civic pride or nationalistic endeavour; or even to transmit overtly ideological concepts.

Given such a variety of purposes, museums reveal remarkable diversity in form, content, and even function. Yet, despite such diversity, they are bound by a common goal: the preservation and interpretation of some material aspect of society's cultural consciousness.

Museums are discussed in many articles. For an account of the origins of museums and a review of their changing nature and definition over time, see museum, history of. For an overview of issues relevant to the practice of museum science, such as collection, documentation, and exhibition, see museum, operation of. For a discussion of the classification of museums and for descriptions of general museums, natural history and natural science museums, science and technology museums, history museums, and art museums, see museum, types of.

Geoffrey D. Lewis

This is the complete article, containing 264 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page).

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    Museum
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    Museum from Encyclopedia Brittanica. ©2009 Encyclopedia Brittanica. All rights reserved.

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