Originally posted by Chris George
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Originally posted by Neal Shelden
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I don't know the Docklands Museum and I have not, as I said, seen the exhibit, but I think we might begin to understand why the exhibition is the way it is.
I would agree with Stewart's remarks that the academic world at large and the museum community does not know that much about Jack the Ripper. The powers that be at the Docklands Museum probably thought this was a good idea for an exhibition, but given where they were coming from in terms of their own interests and orientation plus the scholarly research interests of most of the academics that they enlisted to talk (see my prior post giving the list of lunchtime talks), the exhibition ended up being as it is -- on the dry side.
But it is, I am certain, conceivably better than it might been if the curators had made other choices. For example, surely it is better than a London Dungeon or Madame Tussaud's Chamber of Horrors style of presentation -- we might consider they could have gone for a more penny dreadful garish approach. The exhibit sounds solid even if the approach is not quite what as some of us, and you particularly, Neal, being focused as you are, commendably, on the victims, would have preferred.
Chris
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