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Peer-reviewed article

Patents and Publics: Engaging Museum Audiences with Issues of Ownership and Invention

July 1, 2014 | Public Programs, Exhibitions
It is all very well to note the hyperbole about patents and ‘intellectual property’ in the recent battles between technology companies such as Apple, Samsung and HTC. But how can museums productively use collection items marked with a patent beyond workaday tasks of identification and cataloguing? We argue that information on patents can enhance visitors’ critical engagement with museum displays; complex ownership claims and counter-claims in patent disputes can underpin lively narratives based around museum objects. Asking why some objects and not others were patented, and how historical consumers responded to that status of ‘patented’ enables us to look at these objects afresh. In particular we analyse the responses of public consultation groups to patenting in the medical trade, as well as the engagement of museum staff with these issues. Such consultation processes offer information that can be used to enhance museum displays with engaging narratives of ownership and invention.

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  • James Stark
    Author
    University of Leeds
  • Graeme Gooday
    Author
    University of Leeds
  • Citation

    ISSN : 1479-8360
    Publication Name: Museums & Society
    Volume: 12
    Number: 2
    Page Number: 104
    Resource Type: Research Products
    Discipline: General STEM | Health and medicine | History/policy/law | Technology
    Audience: General Public | Museum/ISE Professionals
    Environment Type: Public Programs | Museum and Science Center Programs | Exhibitions | Museum and Science Center Exhibits

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